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15" Signature Heavy Hi-Hat 

&*' Cup Chime #5 

18" Signature Power Crash 

5" Signature Bell 

18" Signature Heavy China 

IIP Signature Splash 

18" Signature Power Crash 

2tJ" Signature Power Ride 

15 u Signature Sound Edge Hi-Hat 

2CT Signature Power Crash 

13" Sound Formula Mega Cup Chime 














UP & COMING 

LIMP BIZKIT'S 
JOHN OTTO 

There's hardcore. There'sjazz. 
Then there's John Otto— 
somehow, strangely, right in 
the middle. _ 

by John David Farinella 




BILLY WARD 

A killer resume only tells half the 
tale. Billy Ward makes the drums 
make music. _ 

by William F. Miller 




PORTRAITS 

PRAIRIE PRINCE 

XTC, Jefferson Starship, The 
Tubes, Todd Rundgren—these 
people don't mess around 
with drummers. That's why 

Prairie's their man. _ 

by Robin Tolleson 

118 



IN THE STUDIO 

DAVE LOMBARDO 

Classical music rocks! At least when Dave Lombardo shows 
up at the party. 

by Matt Peiken 

140 

















Volume 23, Number 7 


Cover photo by Lance Mercer 


education 


114 

PERCUSSION TODAY 

Tale Of A Drumline 

A Documentary Of The Mind, Part 2 



by Lee Rudnicki 



124 

DRUM SOLOIST 

Roy Haynes: "Matrix" 




Transcribed by Ted Moore 



126 

ROCK PERSPECTIVES 

Rocking Solid 



by Jay Schellen 



128 

JAZZ DRUMMERS'WORKSHOP 

Basic Training, Part 1 


by John Riley 


130 


STRICTLY TECHNIQUE 

Study In Paradiddles 

by Joe Morello 


132 


DRIVER'S SEAT 

Swingin' In A Modern Age, Part 1 
by Daniel Glass 


148 


THE JOBBING DRUMMER 

Becoming A Working Drummer, Part 2 


by Russ McKinnon 


152 


ARTIST ON TRACK 

The Drummers Of Frank Zappa 

by Mark Griffith 


departments 


AN EDITOR'S OVERVIEW 

An Ounce Of Prevention 


by Rick Van Horn 


8 

32 

34 

136 


READERS' PLATFORM 


ASK A PRO 

Bun E. Carlos, Jack Gavin, and Herman Matthews 


IT'S QUESTIONABLE 


CRITIQUE 





151 

158 

162 


ON THE MOVE 


DRUM MARKET 

Including Vintage Showcase 


INDUSTRY HAPPENINGS 

Including Taking The Stage 




176 DRUMKIT OF THE MONTH 



equipme nt 


38 

NEW AND NOTABLE 





44 

PRODUCT CLOSE-UP 

Yamaha HipGig Drumset 



by Chap Ostrander 


150 

COLLECTORS' CORNER 

Slingerland Sound King Snare 


by Harry Cangany 


144 

MD GIVEAWAY 

Win a fantastic prize package 
including an Arbiter drumkit, Sabian cymbals, 
a DrumFrame, and Gibraltar hardware! 






























































Drumming’s more than just hipXause no matter how you do 
it or describe it, drumming reinforces the core values of life. 






mm 


*, -m 

O' ' < 4 


Amy 


Drumming Is Great Series: No, ± Louie Season 







verview 




An Ounce Of Prevention 


I 'm a little over forty-eight years old, and I've spent forty-two 
of those years playing drums. I slung a marching drum from 
the age of seven until I turned nineteen. I got my first drumkit 
for my ninth birthday. I started "playing out" in bands at thirteen. I 
turned "professional" at eighteen. 

As you can see, I've been actively involved in drumming for a 
long time. And while a lot of that involvement has been fun (the 
creativity, the personal expression, the shared musical experiences 
with band members, the income, the girls...), a lot of it has been 
pure, unadulterated work. And I don't mean practicing my lessons 
or rehearsing with a band. I mean physical work, in terms of 
schlepping a lot of heavy gear around for a lot of years. 

Well, over those years that work has taken its toll on my body. 
As I said, I marched from age seven to age nineteen. By the age of 
fifteen I had bad knees, which I've lived with ever since. By eigh¬ 
teen I was lugging my kit in and out of cars and trucks pretty fre¬ 
quently. At twenty-eight I had to take a week off from a steady gig 
to have a hernia repaired. At thirty-five I started having "back 
problems"—a euphemism for a painful condition in my back that 
could not be specifically diagnosed. By the time I turned forty it 
had been diagnosed: degeneration of the disks in my lower back, 
primarily due to overuse. Earlier this year I was laid up for over a 
week with two ruptured disks, and I'm now facing some pretty 
serious surgery to repair the damage. 

The point of all this is that much of my current physical condi¬ 


tion can be directly attributed to the abuses I've subjected my body 
to over my drumming career. And that's just due to the handling of 
my gear! I've always been a pop drummer; I've never undergone 
anything near the physical strain required to play many of today's 
drumming styles. I hate to imagine what might happen to the bod¬ 
ies of today's players who perform in those styles and then have to 
pack up and load out on a regular basis. 

I'm not here to tell you how to conduct your career. But I do 
suggest that you seriously examine the way in which you treat 
your body during every aspect of your work-related routine. If you 
need to lift your equipment, do so properly, and wear some sort of 
back support. Better yet, get help. If you have to carry gear over 
long distances, invest in a hand truck or a convertible dolly. If you 
need to get from an elevated stage or a loading dock down to a 
lower level, take the stairs, don't just jump. Watch your posture 
when you're playing. Stretch during your breaks. (And let's not 
forget about hearing protection!) 

If I sound like an alarmist (or an old biddy), it's because hind¬ 
sight is 20/20, and only now do I see how much physical damage I 
could have avoided over the years through some simple preventive 
measures. It's my hope that you can learn from my mistakes, and 
employ those preventive measures now. That way, you can look 
forward to a long, problem-free career. 



\fooeRfi 

DRumme r 


Volume 23, Number 7 

The World's Most Widely Read Drum Magazine 


EDITOR/PUBLISHER 

RONALD SPAGNARDI 

CHIEF OPERATING OFFICER 

ISABEL SPAGNARDI 

ASSOCIATE PUBLISHER 

TRACY A. KEARNS 

SENIOR EDITOR 

RICK VAN HORN 

EDITORIAL DIRECTOR 

WILLIAM F. MILLER 

MANAGING EDITOR 

ADAM I. BUD0FSKY 

ASSOCIATE EDITOR 

RICH WATSON 

EDITORIAL ASSISTANT 

SUZANNE HURRING 

SENIOR ART DIRECTOR 

SCOTT G. BIENST0CK 

ART DIRECTOR 

TOM LYON 

ASSISTANT ART DIRECTOR 

MICHELE M. NEWH0USE 

ADVERTISING DIRECTOR 

BOB BERENS0N 

ADVERTISING ASSISTANT 

JOAN C. STICKEL 

EDITORIAL/ADV. ASSISTANT 

BILLY AMEND0LA 

MARKETING AND 
PUBLIC RELATIONS 

DIANA LITTLE 

WEB SITE DIRECTOR 

KEVIN W. KEARNS 

OFFICE ASSISTANT 

R0SLYN MADIA 


MODERN DRUMMER ADVISORY BOARD: Henry Adler, 
Kenny Aronoff, Eddie Bayers, Louie Bellson, Bill Bruford, Harry 
Cangany, Jim Chapin, Dennis DeLucia, Les DeMerle, Len 
DiMuzio, Charlie Donnelly, Peter Erskine, Vic Firth, Bob Gatzen, 
Danny Gottlieb, Sonny Igoe, Jim Keltner, Paul Leim, Peter 
Magadini, George Marsh, Joe Morello, Rod Morgenstein, Andy 
Newmark, Neil Peart, Ed Shaughnessy, Steve Smith, Ed Thigpen, 
Dave Weckl, Paul Wertico. 

CONTRIBUTING WRITERS: Robyn Flans, Burt Korall, 
Rick Mattingly, Ken Micallef, Mark Parsons, Matt Peiken, 
Robin Tolleson, Lauren Vogel Weiss, T. Brace Wittet. 

MODERN DRUMMER magazine (ISSN 0194-4533) is pub¬ 
lished monthly by MODERN DRUMMER Publications, Inc., 
12 Old Bridge Road, Cedar Grove, NJ 07009. PERIODICALS 
MAIL POSTAGE paid at Cedar Grove, NJ 07009 and at addi¬ 
tional mailing offices. Copyright 1999 by MODERN DRUM¬ 
MER Publications, Inc. All rights reserved. Reproduction 
without the permission of the publisher is prohibited. 

EDITORIAL/ADVERTISING/ADMINISTRATIVE 
OFFICES: MODERN DRUMMER Publications, 12 Old 

Bridge Road, Cedar Grove, NJ 07009. Tel: (973) 239-4140. 
Fax: (973)239-7139. Email: mdinfo@moderndrummer.com 

MODERN DRUMMER ONLINE: www.modemdnimmer.com 

MODERN DRUMMER welcomes manuscripts and photo¬ 
graphic material, however, cannot assume responsibility for 
them. Such items must be accompanied by a self-addressed, 
stamped envelope. 



Printed in The United States 


SUBSCRIPTIONS: US, Canada, and Mexico $34.97 per year; 
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two years. Single copies $4.95. 

SUBSCRIPTION CORRESPONDENCE: Modem Drummer, 
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Allow at least six weeks for a change. Please provide both old 
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MUSIC DEALERS: Modem Drummer is available for resale 
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INTERNATIONAL LICENSING REPRESENTATIVE: 

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POSTMASTER: Send address changes to Modern Drummer, 
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Music Magazine Publishers Association 


MODERN DRUMMER JULY 1999 















E M O 


DRUMHEADS 


The Class Of '99 



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playing Remo will put you at the head of 
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HOWTO REACH US 

Correspondence to MD's Readers' Platform 
maybesentbymail: 
1201dBridgeRoad, 

Cedar Grove,NJ07009 
by fax: (973)239-7139 
by email: rvh@moderndrummer.com 


MICKEY HART 

Thanks for your April '99 cover story with 
Mickey Hart. With every article I read 
about Mickey my respect and admiration 
for him grows. I find the words he shares 
and the music he cre¬ 
ates to be very inspir¬ 
ing in my life. I cannot 
fully express in words 
how he continues to 
help in my growth as a 
musician. Mickey Hart 
has wisdom and 
insight beyond his 
years. He is truly a living legend with a 
spirit for music and how it can break down 
barriers. Mickey continues to amaze me 
with his dedication, passion, and love for 
rhythm. I thank you and him for sharing his 
words with the world. 

Casey Austin 
via Internet 


PAUL LEIM 

Thanks for the article about Paul Leim. He 
has been a favorite of mine for a long time, 
and it was interesting to learn about some 
of his experiences both past and present. 
Thanks for a great magazine, and thanks, 
Paul, for laying down some incredible 
drum tracks on a variety of albums. 

Eric N. Westermann 
Little Rock, AR 

As another type of studio artist (a commer¬ 
cial photographer), I related to Paul Leim's 
work ethic. By the questions posed, it 
seemed the interviewer, Robyn Flans, did 
not fully understand his job of a studio 
artist. What I have found out in working 
with other creatives and (art) directors is: 

1) They are the client, and they pay my bill. 

2) They use me for my style, ability, cost- 
effectiveness, and location. 

3) They want collaboration, not just a clerk 


with an instrument. 

4) They want reliable, accurate, pre¬ 
dictable, and repeatable results. 

Apparently these axioms transpose to 
session drumming as well as studio pho¬ 
tography. It was pleasing to read about 
Paul's dedication to the producer's needs 
and wants. I thought studio photography 
was the only profession that sometimes had 
to cave to safe solutions and rehashed 
ideas. But look at Paul's success. He is 
busy enough to schedule his own holidays, 
and is at the top of his pay scale. 

Chris Brown 
via Internet 

Without a lot of pontification or belittle- 
ment of Paul Leim, I felt his comment 
regarding how much money he has made 
compared to legendary and profoundly 
influential drummers Buddy Rich, Tony 
Williams, and Billy Cobham totally unnec¬ 
essary. One could say that I am taking it 
out of context because Paul simply meant 
that you do not have to have a lot of chops 
to play for the song, make it feel good, and 
make a good living at music (perhaps even 
a far better one than if you are playing less 
accessible music). But it would have been 
better if he had just said that. 

Name not given 
via Internet 

When the paragraph about the icon players 
Buddy Rich, Tony Williams, and Billy 
Cobham was highlighted out of context in 
my recent MD feature article, it might have 
been interpreted as if I were comparing my 
income to theirs. That was the farthest 
thing from my intent. Please let me clarify. 

In my early years, many of my drum pals 
idolized Buddy, Tony, and Billy. As I stat¬ 
ed in the interview, I idolized the recording 
drummers: Hal Blaine, Ron Tutt, Larrie 
Londin, and Buddy Harman. The quote 
was an off-handed statement referring to 
most drummers I knew while growing up 
who were into soloists, while I was not. 
Those fellow players were the "those guys" 
I was referring to. Buddy Rich, Tony 
Williams, and Billy Cobham by any stan¬ 
dard were and are the most incredible, 
standard-setting soloists of our time. I 
would not impugn their incredible integrity 
with a slight referral as "those guys." 



To mention money at all in an interview 
was a slip of judgment on my part. To have 
it be misinterpreted by anyone is very awk¬ 
ward and unfortunate. Hopefully this will 
clarify that statement! I guess I need to be 
more careful of exactly how I say things 
to print. 

Paul Leim 
Nashville, TN 


JOE CHAMBERS 

Thank you for the interview with Joe 
Chambers in the April '99 issue. It's sad to 
say, but he's still a talent greatly deserving 
wider recognition. I certainly hope the 
release of Mirrors and the re-release of The 
Almoravidhdp to rectify that situation. It's 
always wonderful to learn more about the 
history of jazz, and bebop in particular. 
Even more wonderful has been to see your 
recent coverage of other players not quite 
in the limelight, like Mike Clark, Michael 
Giles, Eric Gravatt, and Gary Husband. 
Keep up the great work! 

Russ Fischer 
via Internet 

The interview with Joe Chambers was a 
disgrace. He talks about drugs as if it was a 
good or cool thing to do. Doesn't he or the 
editors at Modern Drummer realize that 
young adults are reading this article? How 
can a magazine do this and not even have a 
footnote—or at least ask Chambers to give 
some advice to young people from what he 
learned doing drugs? Shame on him and all 
at Modern Drummer. 

Toby Lee 
via Internet 

Are you serious with the Joe Chambers 
article? Very pro drug. He made it sound 
so cool and so innocent. Why no rebuttal 
on your part? Would you want a twelve- 
year-old reading, "For us it was cocaine, 
marijuana, mescaline, and LSD. And only 
cocaine on the sessions," without any 
advice or regrets about it—and no Modern 
Drummer response! 

Thanks, Joe Chambers, for the black eye. 
No respect here. Bad article. 

Chuck Coronato 
Totowa, NJ 


■MODERN DRUMMER JULY IW 












Pi 



The Cabria Jazz Quartet 

The first standardized 4-piece kit designed specifically 
for the jazz player on a budget. 

We asked Danny Gottlieb — the rhythm master who’s 


Premier Cabria Jazz Quartet 
shown in Metallic Silver with 
2000 Series hardware pack #5046. 


mixed it up with jazz greats from Metheny and McLaughlin 
to Getz and Gomez — how he'd design a jazz kit, 

How about sweet-toned wood shells with a lacquer finish? An 18" 
bass and 5 1/2" wood snare. A 14" floor and 12" rack tom. Add 



stable, lightweight hardware. 

But most of all, he told us with a smile, they shouldn't be expensive 
— they should just sound expensive. 


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THANKS FROM NUSSBAUM 

This note is to acknowledge Bill Miller for 
his very complimentary review of my pre¬ 
sentation at the 1998 PAS Convention in 
Orlando. [Industry Happenings, April '99 
MD] Thank you. Positive feedback is 
always a welcome treat! 

I'd just like to clarify that the "hand 
farts" I performed during my solo were for 
the benefit of my kids, who were along 
with my wife and me to enjoy the added 
benefit of the Disney experience. 

I always look forward to the next issue 
of MD. Keep up the good work! 

Adam Nussbaum 
Highland Mills, NY 


THANKS FROM RALPH 

I was flipping through my April issue of 
Modern Drummer when to my amazement I 
came across a review of Blue Collar Black 
Future, by Dripping Goss. I want to thank 
Fran Azzarto and Lisa Crouch for their kind¬ 
ness and generosity with regard to the com¬ 
pliments they gave me and my drumming. 
I'm incredibly flattered and humbled at the 
same time. I really appreciate your support. 


It means a lot to me, and it reminds me of 
why I play music in the first place. 

Thanks again. 

Tobias Ralph 
via Internet 


CALLING DR. WORKMAN 

Just a quick word to let you know how 
much I valued the March and April articles 
by Dr. Darin "Dutch" Workman regarding 
drummers' health and fitness. I found the 
articles to be insightful and informative, 
and I have passed them along to my stu¬ 
dents. I have also made several changes to 
my current setup in an effort to perform in a 
more "efficient" and health-conscious man¬ 
ner. Subtle changes in throne adjustment 
and cymbal placement have produced 
noticable results in my efforts to consis¬ 
tently drum for longer periods of time with 
less back pain. Dr. Workman has shown 
that drummers can make intelligent choices 
in their efforts to improve their craft. Many 
thanks for the guidance. 

Mike Montalbano 
via Internet 


ALESSANDRABELLONI 

I commend you on your March issue, for 
the strongest presence of women drummers 
I have ever seen in Modern Drummer. (It 
was about time.) I especially thank you for 
exposing me to a new form of tambourine 
drumming I had never heard of, via your 
article on Alessandra Belloni. A good per¬ 
cussionist is always a powerful thing, and 
to see her using the power she wields for 
good is inspiring. She seems to have the 
same amount of intense strength she speaks 
of in the article, and I applaud her for mak¬ 
ing a necessary stand for the unity of the 
drum world regardless of sex. Thank you 
for a great issue. 

Ben Yohai 
via Internet 


ROGERS R380 SNARE UPDATE 

After my inquiry regarding the proper 
snares to fit my Rogers R380 snare drum 
was printed in the It's Questionable depart¬ 
ment of the March 1999 Modern Drummer, 
I received a call from Mitch Greenberg of 
the Bison Drum Co. He told me that he had 
given a huge inventory of Rogers parts to 











Here I ve found many 
incredible sounds for use in all 
kinds of musical styles. 

The endless variety of available 
sounds helps me to create 
music. 


H-Bkrckx, Illegal Atom* 


i hip. Especially 


the Hlhats. They have 
important part of our g 
fur several years. 

They' m the perfect ey 
for 

Clyde Stubblefield l 
John Jabo Stark* 

James Brown 


The %tnJng Saitss of crashes 
and splashes, with their crystal 
clear sound and short decay, art 
a dream come true for session 

work The add-on of Lightning 


Totally cool sounds lor 
beginners, students or advanc 
players I think Including a In 
jno cymbal hag with a starter 


For my students, Marathi 
the best value going. 

Keith Capsule (USA) 

E nuff Said, Clinician 



CLASSICS?^ 

! \ V ! v 

□assies have a 
focused sound q 

FuaJtly just right 

bnLim 

tor players like 

any musical set 


' m *^M 

Peter Michae 

E-Train 

[ _ 




















Fine Tuning Your Snare Di 

Evans is doing for your snare drum what it did for your bass drum - that is, allowing 
you to dial up a graduated range of sounds from wide open to dampened down. Evans 
dedicated snare drumheads do this with a minimum off fu!ss. Simply place the right head 
on the drum, tension it high or low to taste (a handy tuning reference guide accompanies 
each head,) and your dream snare sound emerges* 

Remember - these are guides. In the realm of tone, nothing is etched in stone - or plastic. 



G1 COATED 

A drumming tradition, the unadorned, white coated makes 
the leap from vintage to modern. The Genera-weight film 
ensures that the G1 is both durable and sensitive. 

Just breathe on the G1 and the snares respond! Wide-open, 
it is your artist's palette, yielding a rainbow of timbres - 
depending on where and how you touch it. 

UNO 58 1000 DRV 

A thin, single-ply head without the annoying overtones 
or that brittle feeling when you crank it up. The tiny vents, 
strategically placed around the circumference, filter out 
only the harshest overtones. You get lightning response 
with sticks or brushes, a velvety smooth rimshot, and a 
"softer" feeling - even at high tension, 

GENERA 

The best of both worlds, the GENERA is a single-ply head 
that has the fat spread of a double-ply head, A slender 2 mil 
muffling ring on the underside "floats" with the head, 
affording a touch of dampening. The rimshot remains dear. 


GENBtA DRY 

A step dryer in a one-ply head, Evans tried-and-true vents 
eliminate stray harmonics - and permit the head to "give" 
a little under your stick. Tuned medium/loose and struck 
dead center, the head responds with a snarey sizzle that's 
microphone friendly. Tighten it and the GENERA DRY 
opens-up with a crisp rimshot, 

POWER CENTER 

We heard your prayers. You asked for the response of a 
single-ply head, but had concerns about trashing the middle. 
The Power Circle adds durability - and focus - where the 
stick falls most. Meanwhile, the overtones sing around the 
rim. Unique perforated vents open up the sound and make 
for a user-friendly feeling. 

G2 COATED 

We are entering two-ply territory - two 7 mil plies, to be 
exact. The G2 formula, rapidly becoming a world benchmark 
on toms, is a delight on snare. It gives you the wide-open 
response of the Gl, with added depth of tone. Pop the 
G2 COATED onto a 7" brass, 5" steel or 3" birch - onto any 
snare drum, for that matter - for an instant match. 

The G2 COATED is a snare drum head for all tastes and 
backbeats,..a universal soldier. 


SEND FOR A FREE EVANS DRUMHEAD CATALOG FOR A COMPLETE LISTING OF EVANS PRODUCTS, 





















GENERA HD 

It yields an extremely full rimshot and balanced response 
from the center. Lay into this one with the assurance that 
it is not going to go anywhere! The muffling is just a tad 
and banishes only troublesome overtones. Tighten the 
GENERA HD; it will not choke. It barks live - plus, it speaks 
within an ideal frequency window for studio. 

GENERA HD DRV 

A double-ply head with muffling ring that is instantly both 
contemporary and retro. Tune it loose to evoke Abbey Road 
tube mikes or 1970s Memphis. Crank it up and it sparkles 
with an exquisite mixture of overtones. Great for studio, 
the GENERA HD DRY has the necessary crack live to wedge 
through overdriven guitars and keyboards. Those tiny dry 
vents and narrow muffling ring go to work at any tuning. 
The stick feels plain good when you smack this one hard! 

HYDRAULIC SNARE 

What is "funk?" Comprised of an outer 7 mil ply and an 
inner 6.5 mil ply sandwiching a layer of oil, it has the wet 
sound that defined the '70s - again in vogue! A durable 
head, with a new brush coating, the HYDRAULIC SNARE 
has a short sustain that emphasizes the fundamental tone of 
your drum. A blanket cure for troublesome snare drums and 
reflective rooms, this Evans veteran is back in the high life. 


ST 

The ST buries other two-ply heads in its category. Packing 
two layers of 7.5 mil film, we are talking serious protection! 
Ah, but the sound ...the ST promotes a full-bandwidth 
rimshot. It has all the volume and ring you could ask for, 
yet responds to the flick of a fingernail. For butt-end or 
tip players! 

ST DRY 

The same two plies, but what a difference those vents make! 
The ST DRY has the volume and aggression of the ST, but 
with the higher harmonics brushed from the picture. It cuts 
through with rich tone. Ghost notes articulate beautifully, 
while the rimshot is lightly gated. Rock-hard, it holds its 
tone. Crack it fearlessly and the vents promote an organic 
sensation - almost "aged-in" like a vintage ride cymbal. 



J. D’Addario & Company, Inc. • PO Box 290 • Farmingdale, New York 11735 USA • E-Mail: evans@daddario.com • http://www.daddario.com 










w) Avedis' Ziltijfon Cojiijwny 



jhfcy Financial Ass© 
Addictiofi Recovery 
:ion-24pM|-Day 


1 (800) 687-42271,1 (877X626-2748 


Andy Foote at the Drum Supply House 
([901] 423-3786). I now have the right 
snare on my drum and it kicks the butt that 
it should! I thought you might want to pass 
this on to your readers. 

Todd Findlay 
Kelowna, BC, Canada 


RESPONSE ID LEWIS 

Although he probably won't ever read this, 
I'd like to respond to George C. Lewis's 
bitter letter in the April issue ofMD. 

It is perfectly understandable—from a 
marketing point of view—that MD must 
bow to market pressure and consistently 
feature popular rock drummers on its 
cover. However, I find MD to be very bal¬ 
anced between the covers. Every issue has 
at least one article on an artist who labors 
in jazz or studio obscurity, someone whose 
talents testify to more practice and dedica¬ 
tion than the young rock drummer whose 
only qualification seems to be a recent dou¬ 
ble-platinum album. Besides, in some cases 
those popular rock drummers have more 
chops than their images may indicate. I 
used to blow off John Bonham —until I 



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sat down on my throne and tried to 
imitate him. 

MD strives to keep us current with many 
music scenes—and with players at all lev¬ 
els—and I feel they do an admirable job. 
However, this does not obligate them to 
publish the bio of every artist who submits 
one. If that were so, each issue would be of 
encyclopedic proportions. 

The debate over sincerity vs. economic 
reality in music is open-ended. I won't stir 
up that topic, but I will mention my moti¬ 
vation for writing this letter. As I read Mr. 
Lewis's letter, I found his choice of Buddy 
Rich as a legend "legitimately" worthy of 
MD's attention most ironic. Who did he 
choose to represent the "real" musician? A 
child-prodigy vaudevillian who, as an 
adult, played for top acts like Frank Sinatra 
and Sammy Davis. A man who appeared 
on The Tonight Show numerous times. 

One of two drummers (the other being 
Gene Krupa) whom non-drummers could 
be expected to recognize. In other words, 
one of the most commercially successful 
drummers of his era. What about Chick 
Webb? Shadow Wilson? Dave Tough? I 
mean no disrespect for Buddy. I simply 
point out that it is difficult for us to dissoci¬ 
ate praise for musical talent from commer¬ 


cial success. 

I will continue to subscribe to MD, 
enjoying the articles on "heavy metal sweat 
hogs"—to borrow a phrase from an angry 
letter to the editor about four years ago— 
and the "obscure jazzheads." 

Clay Venable 
via Internet 


SETTING H RECORD STRAIGHT 

I realize it's been a while since the story on 
Barrett Martin ran in your October 1998 
issue. However, there was some incorrect 
information in the section devoted to the 
albums Barrett listens to for "inspiration." 
Specifically: It was Chet Forest, not Harvey 
Mason, who played drums on the classic 
Marvin Gaye record, What's Going On. 

Since this is inspirational material for Barrett 
Martin (as it has been for me), it's important 
to know where the inspiration is actually 
coming from. 

Chet was a well-respected drummer from 
Detroit, with many credits to his name. He 
and his family moved to Las Vegas in the 
mid-1970s, at which time he was working in 
Paul Anka's big band. Prior to working with 
Paul he had been with Peggy Lee. Chet was 


a terrific show and big band drummer who 
backed all the big name performers in the 
top Las Vegas showrooms. He was also 
known and respected throughout the jazz 
community. 

It should also be noted that while still liv¬ 
ing in Detroit, Chet was part of a small 
group of white musicians who did numerous 
sessions for Motown Records, in those early 
and very successful days, at the now famous 
Hitsville recording studio. 

Chet Forest passed away in 1990. We 
miss him. 

Larry Zack (Chet's brother) 
via Internet 


Editor's note: Sorry for the error, Larry. 
Since our copy of the LP doesn't list session 
personnel (apparently Barren's doesn't 
either; he also wasn't sure who the drum¬ 
mer was) we left it to our own feeble memo¬ 
ries, and guessed wrong. Chet's perfor¬ 
mance was wonderful, and What's Going 
On is a timeless memorial to his talents. 

Sharp readers also caught a mistake in 
the John Coltrane Blue Train entry. Philly 
Joe Jones, not Elvin Jones, played on that 
album, Coltrane's only one as a leader on 
Blue Note, and an undisputed classic. 



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W hen Rod Morgenstein was approached about a record¬ 
ing project with King's X vocalist/guitarist Ty Tabor 
and Dream Theater keyboardist Derek Sherinian and 
bassist John Myung, he assumed it would be a one-shot album 
deal and the music would consist primarily of jamming. But the 
four musicians quickly established a group identity as Platypus, 
and the resulting album, When Pus Comes To Shove (Velvel), 
contains some very sophisticated compositions. 

"When I was in Winger," Morgenstein says, "King's X and 
Dream Theater each opened a couple of our shows, and I got first¬ 
hand exposure to the talents of both bands. And then the Rudess 
Morgenstein Project toured in Europe with Dream Theater in 
1998. So when I was contacted about this project, it sounded 
very exciting. 

"When we first got together, Derek wanted to do an all-instru¬ 
mental album of killer fusion/progressive music. But after being 
in The Dixie Dregs and The Steve Morse Band, my attitude was, 
'Been there, done that.' So we had a nice meeting of the minds 
among everyone and went for a balance of instrumental and 
vocal tunes." 

Having functioned with the Rudess Morgenstein Project as a 
composer and a drummer, Rod was happy that he could contribute 
to Platypus on a comparable level. "All of us brought in ideas for 
tunes, and 'Chimes' and 'Blue Plate Special' are mine," he says. 
"You can hear a Dregs influence in those. You can also hear 
King's X and Dream Theater overtones on other tunes, so it's a 
conglomeration of the different bands we play in." 

Rod's drumming on When Pus Comes To Shove combines the 


power of his Winger grooves with the rhythmic sophistication of 
his work in The Dregs. "The first tune, 'Standing In Line,' is a 
balls-to-the-wall uptempo rocker," Rod says. "But most songs like 
that are in 4/4 all the way through, and this one alternates between 
4/4 and 3/4. A lot of people won't notice that, though, because 
you can tap your foot to it. 'Platt Opus' has time changes all over 
the place; and we had huge charts hanging off the music stands 
when we cut it. From one song to the next, I got to switch gears as 
we moved between rock, fusion, and progressive rock. So here I 
am again playing in a group that does a lot of different things, 
which is what I think I do best." 

Platypus is already planning a second album. "We want to play 
live, but not until we have at least two CDs' worth of music," 
Morgenstein says. In the meantime, The Dixie Dregs are hoping 
to tour later this year. "It depends on everyone's schedules," 
he explains. 

Morgenstein has his own schedules to juggle between The 
Dregs, Platypus, The Rudess Morgenstein Project, and teaching at 
the Berklee College of Music. He did some tracks for bassist Kip 
Winger's forthcoming album, and says that the group Winger 
might be doing another project at some point. 

"When The Dregs ended the first time, it hit me that you can't 
have all your eggs in one basket," Morgenstein says. "You have 
to be thinking about the day that whatever you are doing comes to 
an end, because in the music business, most things have a short 
shelf life. So I think it's smart to have your finger in a lot of 
different pies." 

Rick Mattingly 


MODERN DRUMMER JULY 1999 









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T hough drummer/producer Stephen Perkins is again at the 
helm, the recent release of Banyan's second LP finds the 
erstwhile Jane's Addiction and Porno For Pyros skinsman 
with a new role: ringleader. That's right: While the band's epony¬ 
mous debut featured a fixed four-man roster, 1999's Any Time At 
All, tracked in Perkins' home studio, unites a 
revolving cast of more than twenty 
seasoned musicians around 
Stephen's earthy-yet-ethe 
real percussion. 

Centered in a groovy, 
horn-rich world where 
rhythm rules, the album pivots 
smoothly between Latin, Caribbean, space-rock, 
and house music territories while retaining an organic, playful 
feel. Stephen explains: "Basically, I had a bunch of friends come 
over who happened to be fantastic players. I didn't have to call 
someone's lawyer or manager; I'd just pick up the phone and peo¬ 
ple would show up." 

The obvious camaraderie among the participants was fostered 
by the drummer's democratic attitude. "The trick as producer," he 
says, "was not to tell people what to play. I wanted everybody's 
personality to speak." And speak they do. From bassists Flea, 
Mike Watt, and Rob Wasserman, to guitarists Buckethead and 
John Frusciante, each person puts his individual stamp on the end 
result. Most tracks were spawned from group improvisation, out 
of which the musicians would pull interesting themes and 
melodies. Perkins would then overdub as needed, summoning 
folks to add horn lines and keyboard parts, and finally, building 
upon the tracks himself with layers of percussion. "I was never 
one to just put down a drum track and say, That's it,"' he reflects. 
"I love turning the lights down, putting the headphones on, and 
adding something here, something there." 

In fact, the bulk of Stephen's percussion arsenal found its way 
onto Any Time At All, turning the LP into a veritable "who's who" 
of devices from around the world. Snares, tom-toms, steel drums, 
talking drums, timpani, mallet percussion—it's all there. And on 
several tracks you'll even hear Perkins splashing around his 
Jacuzzi, creating beautiful sheets of rhythm simply by slapping 
the water. 

As Stephen continues to expand Perkana Perkussion, his innov¬ 
ative line of music therapy instruments, he's also found the time 
to join Rage Against The Machine guitarist Tom Morello in cov¬ 
ering Pink Floyd's "Another Brick In The Wall" for the sound¬ 
track to The Faculty, and to play occasional gigs with a 
klezmer band. 

The drummer still practices hard to maintain his chops, but 
don't expect him to be holed up in his home studio every waking 
moment: "Living is half of being a musician, because if you just 
sit in your room all day, you ain't got nothing to say musically. 
Get out there, do some crazy stuff, and put it back in your music." 

For more on Stephen's activities, visit his Web sites: 
www.stephenperkins.com and www.perkanaperkussion.com. 

Michael Parillo 


E urning 
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ff 

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T 'he 

va 
the 


ey say 
variety is 
the spice of 
life. Well, leg¬ 
endary Muscle 
Shoals drummer 
Roger Hawkins 
should know. 
Since the Shoals 
rhythm section 
sold their studio 
in 1984, Hawkins 
has been doing as 
much playing as 
possible. For instance, that's Roger on the Toby Keith hit "Getcha 
Some." Drummer James Stroud, who now mostly produces, hired 
Roger for the song that Keith himself describes as country-rap. 

"Besides the Keith tune," Hawkins says, "I also did the new 
Willie DeVille album, and I just worked on Jimmy Buffett's new 
release, which he recorded in Muscle Shoals at Mac MacAnally's 
studio. We also worked there on Sawyer Brown's latest album, 
You Can Drive Me Wild. And I recorded a new blues album from 
Joe Lewis Walker, produced by Steve Cropper, which was record¬ 
ed at Muscle Shoals Sound, as well as a new Screamin' Jay 
Hawkins album." 


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Roger also worked on an album by Krystye Wilson, produced 
by former Muscle Shoals cohort Jimmy Johnson. He also did one 
side for the Japanese release The Drum Project, along with such 
luminaries as Steve Ferrone, Earl Young, Narada Michael 
Walden, Steve Jordan, Jim Keltner, Grady Tate, Gary Husband, 
Billy Cobham, and Hal Blaine. In addition, Roger worked on a 
Goodyear promotional CD of trucking songs, as well as the 
Chevrolet commercial featuring the Staple Singers' "I'll Take You 
There." And he's set to record The Oak Ridge Boys' next album 
in Nashville. 

Hawkins insists he doesn't take any of his gigs for granted. 
Maybe that's because in May of '97 Roger was forced out of com¬ 
mission due to neck surgery for a degenerated disk and a bone 
spur. "I had shoulder pain for about five years," he admits, "but I 
just didn't say anything about it because I didn't want anybody to 
know I was in any pain. After the surgery, I was trapped in the 
house for sixty-five days. I couldn't drive the car or do anything. 
It was just me and my cat, Max. I'm much better now, but after 
the surgery I just wanted to play. I still live for that feeling that 
drummers get when they're on and really playing. I had it on the 
Willie DeVille project and on the Toby Keith album. Playing still 
brings me the most joy." 

Robyn Flans 


Paul Wertico 

STILL DISCOVERING 

I n the sixteen years he has worked with Pat Metheny, Paul 
Wertico has kept playing with a creative spirit all his own. "I 
was always kind of crazy and sort of made up stuff. I came up 
with my own vocabulary. I always try to tell my students that 
music is like language, and you're communicating with the other 
musicians and the audience." 

Paul's language can be heard on a variety of recent CDs: 
Metheny's Imaginary Day, jazz vocalist Kurt Elling's This Time 
It's Love, and his own trio recordings Union and Live In Warsaw. 

Wertico has also been known to go out on a limb with his 
experimental band Earwax Control. It's not unusual to see him 
using found objects, junk, plastic water bottles, or various kitchen 
utensils as both beaters and percussion instruments. He has even 
found inspiration in his three-year-old daughter. "That's why kids 
are so much fun," Paul says. "I've already stolen five licks from 
her! For me, all these things are just passion. And for better or 
worse, I made my career out of discovering things. There's so 
many guys with technique that can play paradiddles as fast as any¬ 
thing, break up all these linear patterns, play in 19/8—all these 
great things. I can do a little of that stuff. But I always figured 
music is my life, and I only have so much time on this planet to 
do what I do. So my thing is about discovery." Discover 
more about Paul's drumming at his new home page: 
pubweb.acns.nwu.edu/~pwe574/PAUL.HTML. 

Michael Bettine 



\ 


IV. ■ 

"Some people are 
born with their own 
take on things, some 
people try to find it, 
and some are happy 
just to sound like 
other people." 



MODE RN DRUMMER JU LY 1999 



/vlcl^enz i e 

Jingles To JT 


S ince MD last looked in on Toronto session ace Kevan 
McKenzie, he has done over six thousand jingles. 
Combine that with hundreds of albums, lots of TV, and 
sixty motion pictures, and it adds up to quite a drumming 
career. 

But nothing could have prepared McKenzie for the phone 
call last year from his friend, guitarist Bob Mann, breaking the 
news of Carlos Vega's death. Maybe Kevan could audition for 
the drum chair in James Taylor's band? "Right," Kevan 
thought. "When monkeys fly." And then the cell phone rang 
again. This time it was JT himself: Could Kevan make an 
audition today ? 

Fortunately he was able to catch a direct flight to New 
York, and as the day closed Kevan was sitting behind a rental 
drumset. Unlike the other hopefuls at the audition, though, 
Kevan hadn't gotten an advance tape. So he winged it. "We 
played for an hour," the drummer recalls. "Then I called some 
tunes, thinking, 'I'd really love to be able to say I played 
'Handy Man' with James Taylor.' The next morning, James 
called me up to his room and said that he'd like me to come to 
Atlanta. He sent me some tapes, and we rehearsed the after¬ 
noon of the gig. From all accounts, on a musical level, it went 
well, but on an emotional level, it was destined to be a horri¬ 
ble experience. It was the first time they had played 
without Carlos." 

To date, Atlanta has been Kevan's only gig with Taylor. 
"He called me after and said that he had decided to use Steve 
Jordan; he needed to have people around who he knew, and he 
wasn't emotionally ready to replace Carlos. But he also told 
me to leave the door open." 

Since then Kevan has co-produced a live CD with King 
Brand Valium at a Toronto club, and the drummer is thrilled 
to report that recently Mick Jagger made a surprise visit to 
check out the band's melange of computerized and acoustic 
sounds set to dance grooves and backed by a light deejay. 

For a totally different audience, Kevan has scored and engi¬ 
neered music for the Solitudes series of nature-sound CDs, 
displaying his growing passion for percussion. "The role of 
the drumset has been relegated to such a fundamental func¬ 
tion," Kevan says, "where nuance and creativity is often edit¬ 
ed out. The nice thing about percussion is that you can bring 
that aspect back." 

So Kevan isn't sitting around waiting for James Taylor to 
call...but should the call come, he's ready. 

T. Bruce Wittet 



Mews 


* Billy Cobham has left Jazz Is Dead due to schedule 
conflicts with his own band. Jeff Sipe and Rod 
Morgenstein will share the drumming duties, each tour¬ 
ing with the band when they can. 

■ Jimmy Wormworth is filling in for Max Weinberg 
on Late Night for the next several months while Max 
goes on tour with Bruce Springsteen. 

■ Steve Ferrone is on the new Tom Petty & The 
Heartbreakers album, Echo. 

m Carter Beauford is on the recently released Dave 
Matthews live record. Carter was also recently in the 
studio with Victor Wooten laying down tracks for the 
bassist's new record. (A video of these sessions will 
shortly be released by Hudson Music.) 
p Chad Sexton is in the studio with 311, recording 
their next album. Veteran producer Hugh Padgham (Phil 
Collins, The Police) is co-producing. 

* John Riley has been playing many dates in Europe 
recently, as well as several clinic and festival perfor¬ 
mances here in the US. He'll be on another European 
tour in early July with The Vanguard Jazz Orchestra. 

* A.J. Pero is back with the reunited Twisted Sister. 
The band will be on tour this summer. 

* Tommy Igoe is now an associate conductor of 
Broadway's The Lion King. In addition, he has joined 
the jazz faculty at Rutgers University and has been tour¬ 
ing extensively with Art Garfunkel. 

* Chris Whitten can be heard on two movie sound¬ 
tracks, Midsummer Nights Dream and The Debtors. 
He's also working on a drum loop CD. 

■ Jan Rechberger is on Amorphis's newest, Tuonela. 

* Jaime Urcioli can be heard on Copperpot's self-titled 
debut CD. 

* Jason Roeder is on Neurosis's Times Of Grace. The 
band will soon be releasing a companion CD entitled 
Grace, which is designed to be played concurrently with 
Times Of Grace or experienced independently. 

1 Reggae's Third World has recently released a new 
album, Generation Coming, with Tony "Tuption" 
Williams on drums. 

* John Haro is on the road with Econoline Crush, sup¬ 
porting their album The Devil You Know. 

■ Congratulations to Marlene and Mike Portnoy on the 
birth of their son, Max John. 


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T wo things you might never, ever think could be combined would 
be jazz and the hardcore band Limp Bizkit. Yet jazz-trained stick- 
man John Otto makes the chemistry work. Though he can't quite 
swing classic jazz chops in the middle of the band's thrash-'em-up songs, 
he is able to bring a certain groove to a genre that has been better known 
for straight-ahead pounding. In fact, he's quick to point out what it is 
about jazz that he brings to Limp Bizkit. "It's not in the actual music," he 
states. "What jazz has done for me is set my personality of playing." 


As Otto explains it, he's been waiting 
to combine these two genres for some 
time. "I was definitely wanting to do a 
more groove-style kind of thing—but not 
really metal. I've always liked beats that 
swing and are in the pocket, so you want 
to bob your head." It's an experiment 
that's resulted in something different, 
Otto believes. "I'm glad that I'm doing 
something that's working towards a new 
sound," he says. "We're going for some¬ 
thing original, as opposed to just trying to 
do something that will make some 
money. A lot of people are into that, but 
you gotta try to change the way music 
sounds." 

Otto believes he can effect that 
change by adding brand-new textures to 
the music from behind his kit. "I 
approach it more as textures, like on 
break-downs, going for more simple stuff 
and just always trying to change the 
tonality of everything," Otto says. "If it's 


heavy I'll try to make certain parts even 
heavier. Then there are certain songs 
that are laid back, where it's all about 
just keeping a good feel." That philoso¬ 
phy has been applied to the band's latest 
recording, which is targeted for a sum¬ 
mer release. "On some songs there's 
more of a rap style, and on others there's 
more singing," says Otto, "so on those 
songs I try to just lay back and go for 
what textures fit over the vocals. Other 
songs feature more solid fills. We have 
this one song that's in three," he 
explains. "It switches up a bunch of times 
and there's more of a tonal texture. So 
there's a lot of droning toms in there; 
more of a Tool kind of feel. I'm not play¬ 
ing toms as fills, but as parts." Otto adds 
that it's been a refreshing change of 
pace. "Our first album was pretty much 
straight to the point—just straight drums 
and grooves. But now parts are being 
broken down according to the tonality." 


^y~ty avid John Farinella 

















“or» the first record I just did 
normal kinds of fills. On this 
record when there are fills, 
they are interesting fills. Very 
Vinnie Colaiuta-esque.” 


From Otto's perspective, much of his 
personal style comes straight off his hi-hat 
figures, which he started experimenting 
with on the band's 1996 platinum-plus 
debut Three Dollar Bill, Y'all$, though it's 
difficult to pick them out because of the 
album's production. "Our first record was 
made in a vintage studio," says Otto. "It 
was good, but in the mix you can't hear a 
lot of the things the way I wish you could 
hear them. I'm doing some hi-hat patterns 
that are pretty cool. It's tricky groove stuff, 
like two-handed switching." 

That's where John's jazz background 
rears its head. While studying at the 
Douglas Anderson School of the Arts in 
Jacksonville, Florida, he was taught how to 
read jazz charts, which gave him the ability 
to get a feel for a song's phrasing. He's 
also adapted the trumpet notation found on 
a jazz chart and brought it home to his kit. 
"I've tried to bring that over to the hi-hats," 
he explains. "I try to make beats with the 
things I learned about keeping time in jazz. 
The only thing that's dominant in jazz is 
the 2s and 4s and your ride pattern—which 
can be switched up depending if you're in 
a two feel or four feel. I try to take those 


types of hi-hat things, and add little ghost 
notes, and put it all into a straight-four kind 
of groove. Then I mix it up to where it's 
not as straight. I love playing straight 
grooves, because if you try to put too much 
stuff in them the average person is not 
going to get it. I go a lot off of subtleties, 
but the subtleties are real strong." 

Before John Otto had even thought about 
adding ghost notes to his playing, he was a 
twelve-year-old who was bashing out metal 
songs. "My first bands were heavy, 
because I was a little kid," he laughs. "But 
that was thirteen years ago. I started gradu¬ 
ally getting into other things, like funk 
music and actual drum technique. And I 


started learning about music as a whole 
instead of just metal." 

Back in those days John was looking up 
to a handful of different players, from 
Elvin Jones to Jack DeJohnette to Chad 
Wackerman. "I liked all their fills and how 
they were applying time," he says. There 
were also the metal influences: "When I 
was little, Lars Ulrich was the guy." Other 
rock influences included John Bonham and 
Dave Lombardo. 

Otto took those influences (and the 
teachings of Rick Kirkland) into a jam ses¬ 
sion with bassist Sam Rivers and singer 
Fred Durst, where the seeds of Limp Bizkit 
were sown. That trio started writing songs 


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that needed a bit more guitar punch, so 
Otto’s art-school friend Wes Borland 
joined. The final member, DJ Lethal, joined 
after his band, House Of Pain, disbanded. 

John was primed for Limp Bizkit's blend 
of hardcore and rap. "I definitely felt like 
this was something I could pull off as far as 
stylistically making it authentic, changing 
things up, and making things mix," he 
says. "I wanted to break things down to 
where you hear a little bit of different stuff 
than just your normal metal fills—more of 
a groove kind of thing. 'Cause it's all about 
the groove, baby!" 

The groove that John speaks of can be 
found throughout Bizkit's debut. For his 
own part, Otto believes it came together on 
the song "Pollution." "It's the hi-hat pat¬ 
tern in the verses," he says. "It's crazy. If 
you can listen deep into that, you can hear 
what I'm talking about." 

Although John wasn't pleased with the 
drum sounds that were recorded on the 
bulk of Three Dollar Bill, it almost doesn't 
matter, because Limp Bizkit really made 
their name on the road, opening for House 
Of Pain and Kora, and performing on the 
Family Values tour in 1998. Touring did a 


number of things for Otto, on both the per¬ 
sonal and musical fronts. "It made me 
tired," he says with a laugh. "But touring 
does a lot for you that you don't really 
even notice. Since you're playing a lot 
every day, you improve personally, and 
you get a tighter feel for your whole band. 
When we recorded the album we were 
nowhere near as musically tight as we are 
now. It happens to everybody. Touring def¬ 
initely makes you a thousand times better." 

The band took their "thousand times bet¬ 
ter" vibe into the studio in late 1998 to 
record the follow-up to Three Dollar Bill. 
While Durst concentrates on the lyrics and 
the songs' basic structure, it's up to Otto 
and Rivers to build the rhythms. "As far as 
a lot of the rhythm stuff that goes on, we 
all have a good say," says Otto. "Fred likes 
to do a lot structuring-wise, but in terms of 
rhythmic things, I make up a lot of that. 

"We're just one big brain when we write 
songs," John continues. "It happens really 
fast. We'll jam for a long time, and then all 
of a sudden things will just happen— bam. 
It's weird, because some songs will just 
pop out in twenty minutes, whereas other 
songs don't." 


That brings us to Bizkit's latest effort, 
which has pushed the band in a handful of 
new directions. "It's a lot more mature, and 
there's a lot of different kinds of things," 
Otto reports. "In certain songs I stretched it 
out a lot. We do a song called 'Nobody 
Like You,' with Scott Weiland, Jonathan 
Davis, and Fred singing on it together. In 
the middle of that there's a loop groove 
going on, and I'm just kind of taking it and 
stretching it way out. It's pretty cool. It's 
real short, though, so you don't lose inter¬ 
est in it." 

The song John refers to pits him against 
an Akai MPC 2000 sequencer, which was a 
challenge for him. During the verses Wes 
and Sam play over a drum loop played via 
the MPC. Otto joins in about halfway 
through a verse. "I come in with my kick 
drum on a certain kick drum beat that's 
happening on the sequence. I play hi-hats 
over that, and then the chorus is just all 
me—very heavy," he says. 

While playing alongside a sequencer is 
pretty standard fare for most drummers, it 
was a little challenging for Otto to learn 
how to play with DJ Lethal, who he calls a 
mad scientist behind the turntables. Says 



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John, "It definitely is fun. His sound is a 
definite plus. But with all that kind of stuff 
going on, I am confined a lot in my play¬ 
ing. There's a lot of tonal stuff that I gotta 
cut through. I really try to pay a lot of 
attention to that. I also have to make my 
fills count. On the first record I just did 
normal kinds of fills. On this record when 
there are fills, they are interesting fills. A 
lot of 'em were hi-hat splash-kind of fills. 
Very Vinnie Colaiuta-esque." 

While the band did a very., .well., .origi¬ 
nal cover of George Michael's hit song 
"Faith" for their debut, they are turning to 
an old Loverboy song this time around. 
Otto had a little mishap during the record¬ 
ing. "I knocked myself out, man," he 
admits with a slight laugh. "I caught a 
drumstick to the eye and split my face 
open. I felt so stupid. I had to get five 
stitches across my eye." So will they do the 
song live? "Yeah," Otto replies, "but 
you're going to see me with a hockey mask 
on!" 





MODERN DRUMMER JULY 1999 
















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Bun E. Carlos 

Q l've always been curious about the impres¬ 
sive, explosive solo you perform on Cheap 
Trick's Live At Budokan album. It takes place 
just before the band goes into "Come On, Come 
On." Are you using a double pedal during that 
solo? Whether you are or aren't, what is the 
secret to playing like that? 

Steve 
via Internet 

A Steve, the drum break between "Hello There" 
and "Come On, Come On" is a single-stroke 
triplet. The "sticking" is: left hand, right hand, 
right foot (bass drum), and it's played on all the 
drums randomly, as fast as I could go! What real¬ 
ly fattens up the lick is the fact that Tom 
Petersson is muting his 12-string bass strings with 
his left hand, and "scraping along" on those 
muted strings with his right hand. So the "solo" 
isn't actually a solo, it's really a duet. 



Jack Gavin 


n 


Q I saw you perform 
recently with The 
Charlie Daniels Band, 
and your playing was 
sensational. I was 
most impressed with 
your speed around the 
set, and with the con¬ 
stant power you 
achieved. I could really feel the groove, and 
the drums sounded like thunder. 

How did you achieve such power—espe¬ 
cially with the downstroke on the snare 
drum? And do you attribute your speed and 
dexterity around the kit largely to the 
traditional grip you employ so effectively? 

Ivan Reisberg 
Merrick, NY 


A Thanks for your questions and your kind 
words about my playing. To answer your 
question concerning a powerful down- 
stroke, I employ a "whip action" technique 
developed through years of practicing and 
toning my muscles. I learned of this tech¬ 


nique through drummer/instructor Lou 
Marino. The key points are: 

1. Start the downstroke from waist level 

2. Raise the stick to head level 

3. Whip the stick toward the drum 

4. Snap the stick up just prior to impact 
It's also important to stay relaxed and to 
keep the fulcrum (the actual point of hold¬ 
ing the stick) loose. 

As for speed and dexterity around the kit, 
I utilize another technique, called "finger 
control." This focuses on utilizing the wrist 
and fingers to control the bounce of the stick 
in order to achieve speed. I learned this tech¬ 
nique from Lyn Harbold, principal percus¬ 
sionist of the Buffalo Philharmonic. The key 
point to this technique is to snap the finger 
just prior to impact. This, in turn, makes the 
stick bounce off the head. Once you master 
this point, you can work on controlling the 
bounce, which will develop the speed you 
seek. 

I hope these tips will benefit your playing. 
Thanks again for your interest. 


Herman Matthews 

Q I really enjoy your playing on Tower Of 
Power's Rhythm & Business album. I'd 
like to know what cymbals you used on the 
song "East Bay Way"—especially the ride. 
The album as a whole was very inspirational, 
but the cymbal sounds on that song were 
especially so. I'd like to try to find some 
similar models. 

J.H. 

via Internet 


A Rhythm & Business was a great album to 
make. "East Bay Way" was a challenge 
because when Stephen "Doc" Kupka brought 
it in to us it had a different feel to it. In fact, 
it almost didn't make the CD. 

I used all Sabian cymbals to record 
Rhythm & Business. The ride was a 22" AA 
heavy ride. The rest of the cymbals included 
17" and 18" AA medium-thin crashes, an 18" 
AA thin Chinese, and 14" El Sabor hi-hats. I 
don't know if these cymbals are hard to find 
or not. I went to the Sabian factory and 
picked them out a long time ago. Good luck, 
and happy hunting. 


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IB Questionable 



Unbalanced Cymbals 

Q I have a question about cymbal consis- i 
tency. I've noticed that certain cymbals ; 
I have now (and some I've had in the past) i 
turn to face a certain way when I hit them. [ 
For instance, the model name will always j 
rotate to the bottom right-hand side. If I try I 
turning them differently, they eventually i 
return to the same position. This presents a ] 
problem because I'm always hitting the j 
same spot—which has caused breaks in ; 
those specific spots. 

I've tried various ways of positioning \ 
and clamping the cymbals, and I've also : 
changed and rotated the felt piece under- j 
neath. Are these cymbals defective? ] 
Should they maintain a certain level of ! 
consistancy, or is that just the way they \ 
are? My question is more out of concern e 
for cymbal longevity and durability than = 
for sound. The two cymbals I have now \ 
(16" and 17" K Custom crashes) sound \ 
great. But they're brand-new, and I want to | 
treat them well. 

Eric Olson \ 
Boston, MA j 

A Although the problems you describe can \ 
pertain to cymbals of any manufacturer, I 
since you are experiencing the problem = 
with Zildjian cymbals, we asked Zildjian's \ 
John King to offer some suggestions. Here [ 
is his reply: 

"Many variables exist within the process l 
of making cast cymbals. The most impor¬ 
tant of those is the blending of the alloy I 
itself (80% copper, 20% tin). Without delv- : 
ing into the finer points of metallurgical ! 
studies, achieving an evenly dispersed mix e 
of these two raw materials is virtually \ 
impossible. That situation creates a cymbal [ 
casting with varying degrees of density. = 
Despite technological advances in the [ 
rolling process, a cymbal 'blank' will never \ 
maintain an even thickness over its entire ■ 
surface—due to the inconsistency of the ; 
alloy's granular makeup. This inconsisten- ; 
cy also affects what amount of metal is e 
removed from a particular area of the cym- [ 
bal during the lathing process, creating (in j 
some cases) a subtle weight difference on j 
one side of a finished cymbal. Sporadic j 
oxidation of the cymbal surface after heat- i 


ing also affects the amount of material \ 
removed during lathing. These particular \ 
phenomenons do not, in any way, affect the j 
integrity of the instrument. It is the organic : 
nature of the beast. 

"What is more important is how the 
instrument is played! Even if a cymbal 
tends to sit in one particular spot, how that 
cymbal is struck, and with how much . 
velocity, are the greatest influences on its l 
potential lifespan. A sweeping motion, . 
rather than a direct blow towards the center j 
of the cymbal, allows the instrument to nat- . 
urally disperse the effects of the strike. The j 
glancing action also allows the cymbal to . 
better absorb the initial contact over a larg¬ 
er area. If this technique is applied, you e 
needn't concern yourself about hitting a i 
specific spot repeatedly. Hitting a cymbal 
straight on or using a 'slashing' method are = 
probably the two main reasons that cym¬ 
bals reach an early grave. The 'dead on' j 
technique literally backs a cymbal into a 
comer, without giving it any way to release \ 
the resulting physical vibrations evenly. \ 
We often see cymbals that break on the i 
opposite edge from the strike area because : 
of this 'dead on' approach. The 'slashing' [ 
method is the technique of slapping a large = 
area of the cymbal with the shoulder of the \ 
stick, using a great amount of force. This \ 
creates a great deal of stress within the : 
metal, because it cannot react fast enough \ 
to release the effect of that type of strike. 

"If struck properly, a cymbal can with- | 
stand millions of repeated collisions with a ; 
drumstick—providing the velocity of those ! 
collisions are in keeping with the nature of \ 
the instrument being played. A thin cymbal \ 
will react very fast, but will only project so [ 
far because of its limited metal mass. ; 
Hitting it harder in an attempt to generate j 
more volume beyond its sonic limitations \ 
will, in fact, start to choke off its sound and = 
speed up its journey to the cymbal grave- \ 
yard. A good visual guideline to assure l 
proper strike velocity would be to make j 
sure the swinging action of the cymbal (no \ 
matter what the weight) does not come l 
close to allowing the center hole to try to \ 
bend the stem of the cymbal tilter. (The l 
stem always wins!) I believe in not using \ 


any felts or restrictive clamps on top of a 
cymbal, in order to allow the cymbal to 
release its vibrations as naturally as possible 
and achieve maximum dynamic potential. If 
a cymbal is played 'within itself,' it should 
give you years of dependable service." 

Afro Crasher 

Q A composer in a piece we are preparing 
for a concert has stipulated an instru¬ 
ment called an "Afro Crasher." What com¬ 
panies make them, and how do I find 
them? 

Tom Davis 
Director of Bands 
Canandaigua Academy 
Canandaigua NY 

A Before we can help you, we need to clar¬ 
ify terminology. There is a kind of metal 
percussion instrument generically called a 
"crasher," based on the original Pete 
Engelhart Ribbon Crasher. The device is a 
stack of thin steel strips, slightly spaced 
and angled in relation to each other. The 
drummer or percussionist strikes this stack 
of strips with a stick, obtaining a "crashy" 
sound with a lot of "white noise" and high 
end, but none of the ring or sustain of a 
cymbal. Although the sound is slightly 
similar to that of a drumset-mounted tam¬ 
bourine, it's much less melodic and much 
more obnoxious. 

There is a brand of percussion instru¬ 
ments called Afro Percussion. They offer a 
crasher within their catalog, and your com¬ 
poser may be thinking of that particular 
instrument. If so, you can obtain one 
through any Afro Percussion dealer. 

Terry Bozzio's Special Hi-Hat 

Q I like to check out the drummers in your 
magazine to see what they are doing and 
what new things they are playing. But I 
can't figure out what that thing on Terry 
Bozzio's kit that looks like a hi-hat with a 
cage around it is. Can you explain it? 

Willie Davis 
via Internet 


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A The instrument you refer to is a "hi-hat" 
created by using two Remo Spoxe. They 
are actually the metal frames used to make 
Remo's RotoToms (without the drumhead 
and attaching hardware). Remo marketed 
them as percussion-effect instruments a 
few years back. They're still in the catalog, 
but not promoted heavily any more. Terry 
uses the two on a hi-hat stand so that he 
can get a "dicky" sound by striking them 
with a stick (when closed), or a "clanging" 
sound by "splashing" them with his foot. 

Hand Problems 

Q n a twenty-year-old pop-rock drum- 
r. My problem is that no matter how 
much I seem to practice, my hands refuse 
to build up callouses. This, in turn, allows 
for the formation of blisters on both of my 
hands. My band is fairly busy as far as gig¬ 
ging goes, sometimes requiring me to play 
three to four shows a week, two to three 
hours a night. Usually by the fourth show 
my hands just can't take any more. 

I have tried everything from stick wraps 
to gloves to Band-Aids in order to cut back 
on the friction—but to no avail. Can you 
suggest a solution to my problem? 

Chris Ball 
via Internet 

A lt sounds as if you're gripping your 
sticks awfully hard, which might mean 
that they're too small in diameter for you. 
Stick diameter contributes to more than 
impact power, it also contributes to hand 
comfort. Rather than wrap smaller sticks, 
or use gloves (which don't actually 
increase the stick diameter), try experi¬ 
menting with a larger stick. 

You don't have to go overboard. For 
example, if you're using a 5A, try going up 
to a 55, or from a 55 to a 2B, and so on. 
The reasons are twofold: 

1. A larger-diameter stick is easier to hold 
in the hand, requiring less grip and creating 
less friction. 

2. A larger stick will do more of the work, 
giving more impact power and volume, 
thus requiring less force from your hands. 
This, in turn, also reduces the need for grip 
strength, and allows a more relaxed playing 
style. 

It's true that a larger stick can be heav¬ 
ier, and this will take a little getting used 


; to. However, if that proves an insurmount- 
] able problem, there are several brands and 
: models of maple sticks available. Because 
: it is a lighter wood, maple allows you to 
: use a large-diameter stick without having 
j to deal with added weight. The tradeoff for 
i the added comfort that such sticks can pro- 
I vide is the fact that they are less durable 
: than heavier hickory sticks, and will proba- 
' bly break more frequently. 

Some stick models are available in both 
maple and hickory. If you find such a stick 
: that feels comfortable, you might start your 
gigs with the maple model, which is big, 

: but light. As your hands warm up and the 
= gig progresses (and gets louder), you could 
= switch over to the hickory model. This 
\ would keep the same size in your hand, but 
\ would add weight to the sticks and power 
j to your playing. 

\ 

26" Bass Diums 

Q l've been looking around town at a few 
26" bass drums, and I have a couple of 
\ questions. What's the deal with the sound 
} and feel of such a drum? What is the differ- 
] ence between depths of 16", 18", or 20", 
j also pertaining to sound and playability? 
j I've never actually sat behind one and 
j kicked the stuffing outta it, so it's hard for 
j me to make a decision on them. If you 
\ would be so kind as to give me a few 
: pointers or any other info regarding those 
: 26" monsters, I'd be much obliged. 

Robbie McAlister 
via Internet 

i 

, We can give you some ideas, based on 
j things that various drummers have said 
: in MD. But in the long run you should real- 
. ly sit down and play one yourself, because 
: "feel" and "response" are very personal, 

: yet very major issues. 

In general, the bigger the diameter of the 
i drum, the lower the pitch. The deeper the 
. drum's shell, the punchier and more 
j focused the tone. However, there comes a 
j point at which the balance of these two ele- 
i ments is affected. For example, a 20" bass 
! drum that's 18" deep can sound lower and 
\ more powerful than a 22" drum that's 14" 
\ deep. 

j By the time you get into the amount of 
■ air space that exists within a 26" bass 
- drum, some of the rules go out the window. 


j It takes a lot of power just to get a 26" bat- 
\ ter head moving. Then that head has to 
move all the air within the drum, and trans¬ 
fer the energy to the front head. In order to 
\ accomplish that effectively, most drum¬ 
mers don't recommend using a "deep 
\ shell" drum in a 26" diameter. John 
: Bonham's drum was a 14"-deep model, for 
: example. 

A lot of drummers have commented that 
j if they tighten their drumheads at a "nor- 
; mal" bass drum tension, the response of a 
: 26" drum is "sloppy." ("It's like kicking 
into a sail" is one description.) So they 
; often tighten the heads a bit more than 
; usual to compensate. The size of the drum 
. keeps the overall pitch nice and low. 

Beater length also becomes a factor with 

■ a 26" drum. Just as it's hard to hit an 18" 
j drum at center because the beater is too 
; long, it's hard to hit a 26" drum at center 
; because the beater is too short. Unfortu- 

■ nately, although one can "lift" an 18" bass 
; drum to solve the problem with it, one 
I can't "shrink" a 26" drum. You either have 
I to live with the beater hitting below center, 
\ or use a beater with an extended shaft, 
j (This starts affecting your pedal technique 
: and a lot of other factors, so most drum- 
i mers don't do it.) 

\ Finally, if you choose to go with a 26" 
\ drum, purchase a supply of heads whenev- 
: er you can find them. It's not a common 
; size, and most drumshops won't have them 
: in stock. You'll find them to be a special- 
; order item. 

Those are just some points to ponder. 
. We don't mean to discourage you; many 
drummers have sworn by the "big bottom" 
j of 26" drums. 





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Sabian Gets Wired 

V-FX Cymbals and Sounds 


Back And Beta Than Ever 

Shure Beta 98D/S and Beta 91 Drum Mic's 




A creative collaboration between Sabian 
and electronics specialist Tony 
Verderosa has resulted in the V-FX 
series, a range of cymbals and sounds 
for players of electronic and loop-based 
music, along with "forward thinking" 
Latin, funk, rock, and fusion players. 
The sounds are designed to cut through 
high-volume, bass-driven funk and trig¬ 
gered samples that are "more than most 
cymbals are capable of penetrating." 

The new line includes 12" Mini-Hats 
("fast, precise, and penetrating"), 12" 
Distortion Hats (with a semi-flat, 
flanged top, producing "raw response 
reminiscent of hi-hats being fed through 
a distortion pedal"), a 14" ride ("small, 
but with a flat profile and solid, heavy 
weight to ensure dry, cutting defini¬ 
tion"), 14" and 16" crashes ("flat but for 
the bell, for a glassy response and a 
totally new crash sound"), and a 19" 
Tony Verderosa V-FX ride that adds a 
"more traditional look and feel and a 
solid bell sound to the dry, definite 
sounds necessary for this style of 
music." 

Finally, the V-Wave is a multi-role 
percussion piece made of curved raw 
bronze. It fits on a cymbal stand and can 
be played as an accent instrument, used 
in place of a cowbell, or struck for 
rhythms ranging from Latin claves to 
solid funk grooves. 

All V-FX models (except the V-Wave) 
are coated in Sabian's Spectrum lacquer. 
This iridescent coating emits "shifting 
hues of color for a futuristic appearance 
that complements the unique 
sounds of the cymbals." 


Two extremely popular drum mic's from 
Shure have been replaced by improved 
versions within the Beta family of profes¬ 
sional microphones. Both feature all-new 
designs from the ground up. 

The Beta 98D/S is a miniature con¬ 
denser unit designed expressly for toms, 
featuring a maximum SPL rating of 160 
dB (at 800 ohms) and a frequency 
response tailored for this application. Its 
supercardioid pattern ensures "excellent 
isolation and maximum gain before feed¬ 
back," while its small size reduces stage 
clutter. Each unit comes with Shure's new 
A98D mount. Equipped with a small 
gooseneck, the A98D can be employed in 
either horizontal or vertical configurations 
on drum rims, cymbal stands, or virtually 
any typical stage hardware. The mic' and 


mount together are priced at $395.95. The 
mic' alone is available as the Beta 98/S at 
$326.45. 

The Beta 91 is Shure's successor to the 
SM91, the mic' that popularized the use of 
condenser boundary mic's in kick drums. 
Outfitted with a cardioid capsule that sup¬ 
plies "formidable amounts of attack and 
low-end punch," the Beta 91 provides 
"excellent gain before feedback, and rejec¬ 
tion of unwanted noise." The mic's mini¬ 
malist design and slim profile are best uti¬ 
lized by simply resting the unit on a pillow 
or blanket within the drum (thus requiring 
no hardware). The Beta 91 is priced at 
$341. 

Both microphones are supplied with a 
detachable pre-amp section and a durable 
connecting cable. 


In Honor Of Louie 

Remo Limited-Edition Louie Bellson Snare Drum 

In recognition of Louie Bellson's 
enormous contribution to music 
(along with being one of the 
nicest guys on the planet), 

Remo has introduced a lim¬ 
ited-edition Louie Bellson 
snare drum. The 5 1/2x14 
drum (designed in con¬ 
junction with Louie him¬ 
self) features Remo's 
Acousticon H/D drumshell 
with molded bearing edges, 
brass-plated hardware, die-cast 
counterhoops, and Ambassador 
Renaissance heads—along with 

Louie's trademark white marine pearl finish and a commemorative, 
serial-numbered badge. Only 1,000 drums will be made, and each 
will be personally autographed by Louie. 








Steel Yourself To Play Percussion 

Meinl Luis Conte Signature Steel Timbales 
and Hand Hammered Steel Bells 

After the successful introduction of 
their Luis Conte Signature Brass 
timbales, Meinl Percussion now 
offers a steel version. The shells are 
hand-hammered, the edges are 
flared, and the tuning system is tra¬ 
ditional. A height-adjustable stand, 
along with an STB 80 Steel Bell and 
mount, are included with the 14" 
and 15" drums. Steel drums have a 
sharper tone and brighter sound 
quality than brass models. 

Meinl has also expanded its line 
of Steel Bells with new Hand finished in copper, gold, or silver luster. 
Hammered models. Two sizes (8" and Each finish is said to produce a slightly 
6 1/4") are available, each of which come different sound and visual effect. 



Premier Hits The Middle 

XPKAstriaDrumkits 

In an effort to appeal to the second-time buyer/ 
semi-professional player segment of the percus¬ 
sion market, Premier has introduced the mid- 
priced XPKAstria series. With all of the fea¬ 
tures of Premier's popular XPK series, includ¬ 
ing new Quick-Size toms and distinctive two- 
finish bass drum hoops, the Astria range adds 
Premier's ISO suspension mounting system on 
all toms. This mounting method ensures "maxi¬ 
mum isolation of the drum shell from any form 
of rigid mounting, making the drum free to 
move and resonate freely." 

The birch/eucalyptus/birch microwave- 
formed shells used throughout the XPK 
Astria range are available in seven stain and 
high-gloss finishes: cherry sunburst, emerald, 
rosewood, sapphire, tobacco sunburst, topaz, 
and turquoise. 


Sound From The Inside Out 

SIBSystemsIntemalDrumMicrophones 

Combining simplicity with efficiency, SIB 
Systems offers two microphones designed to be 
used for internal drum miking. The ISM-1 Invisible 
Shell Mic' is a dynamic model with a wide fre¬ 
quency range (40-17,000 Hz), allowing it to be 
used in snares, toms, and bass drums up to 20" in 
diameter. It's universally adaptable, because its 
shock-mounted metal bracket attaches to the shell 
using the existing screws of the drum's tension 
casings (lugs). No drilling of the shell is required. 
The mic' is fully adjustable on the mount so that 
the amount of "head attack" versus "shell depth" 
can be tailored to the drummer's preference. 

The SIB KM-1 Kick Mic' has a frequency range 
of 20-12,000 Hz, and is designed for bass drums 
larger than 20" in diameter. It includes a BDHO 
boom mounting arm, providing "hassle-free adjust¬ 
ment" inside the drum. 

SIB Systems also offers the MCB1 Microphone 
Bracket, which can accept most major microphone 
brands, allowing any mic' to become an internal 
mic'. Similarly, the BDHO is adaptable to virtually 
any kick drum mic' on the market. 



From Symphony Hall To The Marching Field 

Yamaha Concert Snare Drums and Field-Corps Carriers 


Three new concert snare drums have 
been added to Yamaha's line of con¬ 
cert percussion. The 6 1/2x14 6-ply 
maple-shell model is said to offer a 
"deep, rich sound." The 5 1/2 x 14 cop¬ 
per-shell model boasts "a balanced 
tone combining the brightness of 
steel with the fullness of brass." And 
the 4 1/2 xl3 6-ply birch model is 
claimed to offer "a bright, focused 
sound with sensitive response and 
cutting projection." All models fea¬ 
ture cable snares, extended strainer 
systems, small-body lugs, and smooth- 
release side strainers. The wood shells 
feature Yamaha's Natural Vintage fin¬ 
ish, which seals the shell from humidi¬ 
ty and is said to provide increased 
dynamic range and sustain. 

For comfort and ergonomic perfor¬ 
mance, Yamaha's Field-Corps Series 
Alumi-Vest carriers now come stan¬ 



dard with a Shoulder Contour 
Adjustment (SCA) system. The system 
features an adjustable back bar and 
angled shoulder bar adjustment that 
allows "quick and easy fitting to the 
player." The adjustable back bar will 
be available separately, and can be 
retrofitted to Field-Corps T-bar carri¬ 
ers for improved comfort and weight 
distribution. 


East Meets West 

Cadeson Snare Drums With Chinese Watercolor Designs 



Up-and-coming Taiwanese drum company 
Cadeson is focusing on high-tech drum devel¬ 
opment, but adding a touch of Oriental flavor 
by offering snare drums that feature tradition¬ 
al Chinese watercolor art designs. The all¬ 
maple snare drums feature die-cast hoops 
(available in chrome, 24K gold, and zinc fin¬ 
ishes) and hand-made yellow brass lugs. The 
graphics illustrate four different plants (plum, 
orchid, chrysanthemum, and bamboo) that 
Chinese custom uses to imply four gentlemen. 

Drums are available in 4x14 and 5x14 sizes. 

Cadeson Drums have recently gained a US dis¬ 
tributor. See "Making Contact" for further information 















Zildiian Sticks With Cindy And B9 

iav Blackman and Bill Stewart Arti 


Cindy Blac 
Drumsticks, Fixed 


New to Zildjian's 
Artist Series of signa¬ 
ture drumsticks is the 
Cindy Blackman model, a 
hickory stick that is .550" 
(14 mm) in diameter and 16" 
(406 mm) long. The stick is 
designed to be light enough for a 
wide range of playing applications, 
yet durable enough to stand up to 
aggressive use. It features an acorn¬ 
shaped bead for full, articulate sounds, 
and Cindy's signature printed in purple on 
the handle. 

Bill Stewart's signature model is a hick¬ 
ory stick designed for light playing styles. 
It's .5" (13 mm) in diameter and 15 7/8" 
(403 mm) long. This compact size is 
slightly shorter than a 5A and thinner than 
a 7A, allowing for a light feel and precise 
control. The bullet-shaped head produces 
warm tones. Bill's signature appears in 
purple on the handle. 

Zildjian's new Fixed Wire Brush was 
developed under the guidance of 


kman and Bill Stewart Artist Series 
Wire Brushes, and Super Drumstick Bag 




renowned jazz drummer Adam Nussbaum. 
Because there are no moving parts (as in a 
retractable brush) the brushes have a very 
cohesive feel in the player's hand. The 
Fixed brushes feature thicker wire strands 
than those used on Zildjian's retractable 
brushes, which produce additional projec¬ 
tion. High-quality surgical-grade rubber is 
used to cover the handle, providing both 


durability and a warm, tacky feel 
to control slippage. The butt end of 
the brush is finished with a steel button 
that can be used to create metallic sound 
effects on drums and cymbals. The brush 
is .550"(14 mm) in diameter and 13" (330 
mm) long, and features the Zildjian logo in 
silver. 

Finally, drummers may wish to store 
their sticks and brushes in Zildjian's new 
Super Drumstick Bag. Designed to offer 
the traveling drummer the right blend of 
generous size, durable construction, and 
truly useful features, the bag can carry a 
large assortment of sticks, brushes, and 
mallets in its main compartment. The 
walls of the bag are padded to ensure max¬ 
imum protection of the sticks. This com¬ 
partment also features a closable accessory 
pocket, dual pen holders, and a business 
card holder. The outside of the bag has 
another large pocket, an adjustable shoul¬ 
der strap, and a separate carrying handle. 
The bag itself is made of heavy-duty mate¬ 
rials and strong nylon strapping. 


Sometimes You Gotta Take A Stand 


Gibraltar Hardware Catalogs and Kaman CB 4000 and 5000 Series Stands 


Kaman Corporation, makers of Gibraltar 
hardware, has released two new catalogs. 
Each of the twenty-four-page catalogs fea¬ 
tures innovative drumset and percussion 
hardware, mounting accessories, and pedals. 

Based on consumer comments, the 
Custom Drum Parts & Accessories cata¬ 
log has been revised to be more "user 
friendly." In addition to several new 
accessories, it contains parts glossaries for 
tom-mounting 
systems, snare 
drum acces¬ 
sories, and bass 
drum parts. 
Dimensions for 
all of their vari¬ 
ous cymbal, 
tom, and per¬ 
cussion mounts 
are pictured 
throughout the 
catalog. "Call¬ 
outs" indicate 
items that have 
been improved 
or are new for 
1999. Retail 
prices are also 
included, mak¬ 
ing it easier for 

CB 5000 cymba I sta nd 


the consumer to choose parts and keep 
track of how much their customizing or 
setup revision will cost. 

Also new from Gibraltar is a four-color 
"full-line" catalog. This features the JZ, 
7500, and 9500 free-standing hardware, 
the Intruder II, Avenger II, and Prowler 
pedals, percussion support and hardware 
transport systems, and the GPR and GRS 
series rack systems. Products with exclu¬ 
sive Gibraltar features have detailed usage 
shots to better illustrate how a pedal works 
or how a stand or rack breaks down. The 
popular Rock By Gibraltar line of semi- 
pro hardware is also included, along with 
over eighteen photos of well-known 
Gibraltar artists and the equipment they 
use. Gibraltar catalogs are free; simply 
write to Kaman Corporation, attn: 
Gibraltar Hardware. 

In Kaman's entry-level CB line, the 
company has introduced all-new CB 4000 
and 5000 series hardware. The 5000 
series, which comes standard on CB MX 
series drumkits, features full-sized double- 
braced leg bases with large tube diameters, 
8 mm cast cymbal tilter assemblies, CB's 
"one-touch" boom adjustment, a throne 
with a firm seat that can be clamped to its 
base, heavy-duty pedal boards with black 
painted and buffed finishes, and a bass 


drum pedal that includes a dual-surface 
beater. 

The 4000 series (standard with SP series 
kits) offers full-sized, double-braced hard¬ 
ware (which has not previously been 
available with drumsets in the SP series' 
price range). Features include cast cymbal 
tilters, a cast snare-basket-adjustment 
mechanism, and a hi-hat and bass drum 
pedal with heavy-duty cast base assem¬ 
blies and frames. Both the 4000 and the 
5000 series are available as separate items 
as well as with their respective drumkits. 



CB 4000 bass drum pedal 



MODERN DRUMMER JULY 1999 















Thirty-Five And Busier Than Ever 

LP 35th-Anniversary Limited-Edition Instruments and Other New Products 


In celebration of 
LP's thirty-fifth 
anniversary, the 
company is offer¬ 
ing special limit¬ 
ed-edition ver¬ 
sions of several of 
their most popular 
instruments. These 
include fiberglass 
congas and bon¬ 
gos in a teal-blue 
finish with silver holographic glitter through¬ 
out the body, fitted with LP's Comfort II rim. 



Also available are LP's original 
Afuche/Cabasa (with a black-stained handle 
and silver commemorative logo), Black 
Beauty cowbell (with a commemorative logo 
on the sides and LP founder Martin Cohen's 
signature on the front, both in contrasting sil¬ 
ver ink), and Jam Blocks (in a black finish 
and silver logo). 

Not a company to rest on its laurels, LP 
has also introduced a slew of brand-new 
products. These include Plastic Sambago 
Bells (available in single- and double-cham¬ 
bers and in hand-held or mounted versions), 
which offer "brilliant sound, excellent pro¬ 
jection, and unsurpassed durability." 

Also new is the Aspire line of congas 
designed for the beginning player. Available 
in wood and fiberglass versions, the congas 
are 28" high, and feature natural rawhide 
heads and LP's EZ Curve rims. Wood dmms 
are made of Siam oak, and come in natural, 
dark wood, or red wood finishes. Fiberglass 
dmms are available in red and black. 

Finally, for percussionists who wish to 
expand their instrumental range, LP now 
offers Generation III bongos in a triple-drum 
configuration, and a triple conga stand for 


mounting three conga drums. The 
Generation IH Triple Bongos feature a 9" 
large drum, a 6 5/8" medium drum, and a 5 
small drum. The dmms can be arranged in a 
triangular configuration or in a straight line. 

The new LP291 Triple Conga Stand ships 
with three of LP's Quick Mount brackets, 
allowing the player to retrofit any LP conga. 
The stand's design allows for mounting up to 
three congas in a close, easy-to-play configu¬ 
ration in seconds. An optional mounting fea¬ 
ture allows one drum to be placed higher 
than the other two. 




And What's More 


CANNON PERCUSSION now offers a 
full line of Chroma-Lock black-chrome 
hardware for drumset players. The finish is 
said to be more lustrous and durable than 
regular powder coating. It's available on 
Cannon 300 and 600 hi-hat stands, snare 
drum stands, and both boom and straight 
cymbal stands. Black-chrome counter¬ 
hoops are also available in most diameters 
from 8" to 18", in addition to bass drum 
spurs, tension rods, claws, lugs, strainers, 
and butt plates. 

To celebrate their 90th Anniversary, 
LUDWIG is offering a commemorative 
1999 souvenir calendar. Each calendar fea¬ 
tures photos of Ludwig's ninety-year histo¬ 
ry, important dates, photos of famous 
Ludwig artists, and a written narrative by 
Bill Ludwig II. Supplies are limited. Order 
forms may be obtained from Ludwig, or 
orders may be done online. See "Making 
Contact" for further information. 

TAMBURO drums, the brand of 
unique stave-construction drums made in 
Italy, are now available in North America, 
distributed by Kaysound. See "Making 
Contact" for further information. 

California jazz drummer MAT 
MARUCCI is offering a masterclass and 
accompanying CD titled The 15-Minute 
Keep-In-Shape Workout, available by 



direct mail. The masterclass is based on an 
article that was written for the Percussive 
Arts Society's Percussive Notes magazine 
and has been adapted to fit the CD format. 
It includes a quick workout that contains 
all the basic drum rudiments recommended 
by PAS. All text and exercises are demon¬ 
strated on the CD, which also contains the 
title cut from Mat's Who Do Voo Doo 
album. A transcription is included in the 
package. The price for the masterclass and 
CD is $12 (US), $15 (Canada), and $18 
(international). All prices are in US funds 
and include postage and handling. Checks 
or money orders should be made out to 
Mat Marucci. See "Making Contact" for 
further information. 

Australia's CHRIS BRADY & 
CRAFTSMEN is now making their 


block-shell snare drums with tongue-and- 
groove construction, which they say pro¬ 
duces sounds "like never before." In relat¬ 
ed news, the long-running conflict over just 
who is Brady Drums has apparently been 
settled in the Supreme Court of Western 
Australia. Chris Brady & Brady Drum 
Company (trading as Chris Brady & 
Craftsmen) sued the directors of "Brady 
Drums" (Handcrafted In Australia) Pty 
Ltd, Mr. Bill Flynn and Mrs. Renee Flynn, 
for incidents occurring over the past six 
years. As of January 1999, the company 
known as "Brady Drums" has ceased oper¬ 
ations, and the trading name was returned 
to Chris Brady. Mr. Brady will continue to 
design and manufacture unique snare 
drums and drumkits from West Australian 
hardwoods, under the names "Brady," 
"Chris Brady & Craftsmen," "Brady Drum 
Company," and "Brady Drums." 













Making Contact 


Brady Drums 

(Chris Brady & Craftsmen) 

17 Stone St. Armadale, WA 6112, Australia 
tel: 011-61-8-9497-2212, 
fax:011-61-8-9497-2242 
cpbrady@merriweb.com 
www.bradydrums.com 

Cadeson Drums 

2122 Kellington Dr., 

McDonough, GA 30253 
teI/fax: (770) 957-5478 

Cannon Percussion 

Universal Percussion 

1431 Heck Rd„ Columbiana, OH 44408 

tel: (800) 282-0110, fax: (800) 979-3786 

Kaman Corporation 

PO Box 507, Bloomfield, CT 06002-0507 
tel: (860) 509-8888, fax: (860) 509-8891 
www.KamanMusic.com 

LP Music Group 

160 Belmont Ave., Garfield, NJ 07026 
tel: (973) 478-6903, fax: (973) 772-3568 
www.lpmusic.com 

Ludwig industries 

PO Box 310, Elkhart, IN 46515 

tel: (219) 522-1675, fax: (219) 295-5405 

www.ludwig-drums.com 


Marucci Music 

PO Box 292, Sacramento, CA 95660 
tel/fax: (916) 344-7186 
marucci@juno.com 
www.jazzinspiration.com/artist15.html 

Meinl Percussion 

Tama Drums 

PO Box 886, Bensalem, PA 19020 
or 

Chesbro Music Co., 

PO Box 2009, Idaho Falls, ID 83403-2009 

Premier 

914 N. Lenola 

Moorestown, NJ 07057 

tel: (609) 231-8825, fax: (609) 231-8829 

www.premier-percussion.com 

Remo 

28101 Industrial Dr., Valencia, CA 91355 
tel: (805) 294-5600, fax: (805) 294-5700 
www.remo.com 

Sabian 

219 Main St., Meductic, New Brunswick, 
Canada E6H 2L5 

tel: (506) 272-2019, fax: (506) 272-2081 
Sabian ©sabian.com 

Shure 

222 HartreyAve., Evanston, IL 60202 
tel: (800) 257-4873, fax: (847) 866-2279 
www.shure.com 


SIB Systems 

Big Bang Distribution 
9420 Reseda Blvd., Suite 350, 

Northridge, CA91324 

tel: (800) 547-6401, fax: (818) 727-1126 

bigbang@wavenet.com 

www.bigbangdist.com 

or 

MTC Music Trade Center NYC 
495 LorimerSt., Brooklyn, NY 11211 
tel: (718) 963-2777, fax: (718) 302-4890 
mtc@inditec.com 

Tamburo Drums 

Kaysound Imports 

100 Walnut St., Door 10A& 11, 

Champlain, NY12919 
or 

2165 46th Ave. 

Lachine, Quebec, Canada H8T 2P1 
tel: (800) 343-0353, fax: (514) 633-8872 
makalisky@aol.com 

Yamaha Band & Orchestra Division 

3445 East Paris Ave., S.E. 

Grand Rapids, Ml 49512 
(616) 940-4900 

info@yamaha.com www.yamaha.com/band 

Zildjian 

22 Longwater Drive, Norwell, MA 02061 
tel: (781) 871-2200, fax: (781) 871-3984 
www.zildjian.com 



rhe Search is ov 

At Bosphorus every cymbal we 
produce is carefully manufactured 
by hand from start to finish. 

We employ old world craftsmen 
to ensure you the finest quality possible. 


0 *- 


Cv 


^ lOQ* 1 * Handmade Turkish Cymbals 


s tor your music 


Bosphorus Cymbals * 6020 Dawson Blvd., Suite I * Norcmss. GA 30093 

Tel: (770) 662-3002 Fax: (770) 447-1036 

E-Mail: info@bosphoruscymbal.com 

Visit us online: www.bosphoruscymbal.com 


MODE R N DRUMWIE R JULY 1999 











Edison invented die light bulb and night changed forever. Bell invented the 
telephone and communication changed forever. Johnny Rabb invented 
tile RhythmSaw and quite possibly percussion could be changed forever. 

Who is Johnny Itabb? 

His product developments are significant, but there is more. 

After graduating hom Rerklee with degrees in Performance and Music Education, 
Johnny moved to Nashville. Ilis labor was rewarded with majoi touring 
and recording experiences, video productions, clinic performances, 
and opportunities to author music books for children. 

Fdison and Bell made history, but so has Rabb. The question lor the ages 
will not be, did Johnny Rabb contribute to his field of endeavor? 

More likely it will be, could Edison or Bell cut a big fat groove? 

wuw-johnnyrabb.com 
3405 Hwy 138 Toone.TN 38381 1 800 34 1 RABB 





^8B Close-Up 



Yamaha HipGig Drumset 



























by Chap Ostrander 

Good things really do come in small packages. 


WHAT'S HOT 

drums sound bigger than they are 
bass drum is especially impressive 
outstanding compactness and portability 


WHAT'S NOT 

length of mounting arms for toms and snare limits 
positioning flexibility 

shortened hi-hat required to fit into the throne case 


Drummers have historically been nomads. Few players enjoy the 
stability of leaving or having equipment in one place. Most have to 
carry drums back and forth between home and gigs, because the 
equipment is not regularly supplied. (Most drummers would prefer 
playing on their own stuff anyway.) So it's out of the house, into 
the van, watch your back, load in, set up in the dark (where did 
that wing nut go?), play the gig, pack it up again, load out, and 
back into the house while dawn quietly breaks. 

Drummers have also always been a resourceful lot. Over the 
years they have devised clever ways to transport their equipment 
in as few trips as possible, with varying degrees of success. We've 
seen folding bass drums, drums cut in half to act as storage cases, 
drums with shortened shells, drums with no shells (Flatjacks, 
Headsets), and miniaturization of all types. But each of these solu¬ 
tions has had its own set of limitations. I own a Headset myself, 
and while I value its portability, I can't really brag about the bass 
drum sound. Jazz players commonly use smaller bass drums and 
toms, but the sound those drums produce wouldn't necessarily 
work in other genres. 

With the introduction of the HipGig (the "Compact Urban 
Drumset"), Yamaha combines yesterday's philosophy with 
today's technology. The entire four-piece kit packs into two cases 
that would easily fit into any car. Add your own cymbal bag and 
hit the road! Sounds like heaven—but let's see how it works. 

The bass drum and the stool are the "old-fashioned" aspects of 
the HipGig that make up the heart of this portable system. The 
bass drum shell is split around its circumference, 6" back from the 
front head. It's held together by three small clips similar to those 
found on flight cases. Identical clips hold the padded seat onto the 
cylindrical hollow throne, so that the throne can double as a hard¬ 
ware case. The snare and two toms stack up in a soft case, with 
fiber dividers between them. You loosen the clips on the bass 
drum, remove the front half, and lower the soft case into the larger 
half. (A loop handle conveniently placed on the top makes this 
procedure easy.) Once this is done, you replace the front half and 
clip it shut. The bass drum then goes into its own soft case for 
transport. That takes care of the drums. The rest of the process is 
as follows: You remove the seat from the throne, disassemble the 
hardware, and place it all inside (including the hi-hat and bass 
pedal). The throne goes into its own soft case. The bass drum and 
the stool each have a carrying handle attached to the shell. To aid 


in carrying, the soft cases for the bass drum and the stool both 
have backpack straps. 

That's how it all packs up. Now let's see what happens when 
you arrive at your gig. You remove the bass drum and the throne 
from their soft cases. The bass opens and you remove the case 
holding the snare and toms. While the bass is open, you attach a 
specially designed riser to the back end. (More on that later.) 
You replace the front of the bass and flip down the legs. You 
attach the bass pedal and set up the hi-hat. Using the memory 
locks, you insert the arms for the small tom and cymbals and the 
arms in back for the snare and low tom. Slide the drums onto the 
rods, set up your cymbals, replace the seat onto the throne, and 
you're done!) This whole process is accomplished in minutes. It 
will take longer to explain to onlookers what they're seeing 
and hearing. 

The shells are 7-ply birch and mahogany (the same as the Club 
Jordan cocktail drum), and are produced using Yamaha's "AirSeal 
System" to ensure roundness. The bearing edges are even and 
rather sharp, finished at a double 45° angle. This makes the drums 
sensitive to tuning changes and gives them a distinct attack. The 
shells are unfinished on the inside. The toms come fitted with 
Remo Pinstripe heads on top and clear Ambassadors on the bot¬ 
tom. The snare comes with a coated Ambassador on top and an 
Ambassador snare head. The bass drum has Remo Renaissance 
Power Stroke 3 heads, with the Yamaha name on the front head. 
The snare and toms have six double-ended tuning lugs. The bass 
drum has eight single lugs on each head. Nylon inserts inside the 
lugs help prevent the tuning from working loose during playing. 
This is a thoughtful addition, and you only feel a slight resistance 
while tuning the drums. The rims on all the drums are triple- 
flanged 1.6 mm steel hoops. Your choice of color (and hopefully, 
your color of choice) is mellow yellow lacquer. In other words, the 
drums are only available in that one color. 

So far, these are pretty standard features. But what sets the 
HipGig kit apart is the sizes of its drums and the way they're 
mounted. 

The majority of the bass drum shell is 7-ply, like the other 
drums. But the front 6" of the shell is 10 plies thick, with a lip 
inside the top half that slides inside the bottom part. This provides 
the strength to hold a tom mount that supports the small tom and 
two cymbal arms. An 8" tom arm is provided for the small tom. 


MODERN DRLAMiMCR JULY 199? 





HipGig setup sequence: 1. Take drum/containers out of their bags. 2. Pop the tops of the seat and bass drum to reveal the hardware and drums 


Tom mounts near the batter side of the bass are placed at approxi¬ 
mately two and ten o'clock. These hold the snare and large tom. 
The 16"-long arms utilize the Yamaha ball mount, which offers a 
great range of positioning possibilities. The cymbal arms each 
have two sections plus a straight rod that either extends the length 
or tilts to become a boom. (You need the boom flexibility to get 
your cymbals where you can reach them.) By means of all these 
arms, everything on the kit mounts on the bass drum except for the 
hi-hat. Memory locks are provided for each arm to retain 
your setting. 

One of the nicest features of the HipGig is that it's an equal- 
opportunity drumset. It can be set up to accommodate right- and 
left-handed players. 

Okay, we've got a novel mounting system. But what about those 
tiny drums? Well, both the 6x10 and 7x13 toms produce full and 
surprisingly fat sounds for their size. Each one has a fairly wide 
range of tuning, and there is good tonal distance between them. 

The 5x12 snare comes with fourteen wire snares, a standard 
side-throw strainer on one side, and a plain butt plate on the other. 
This little drum has a great snare sound. It's crisp and sensitive, 
while at the same time possessing enough body for most playing 
applications. Brush work cuts through, and backbeats are solid. 
Due to the 12" shell, however, rimclicks suffer. Another concern I 
found was that the snare wires 
tended to hit the bottom head 
when I was playing with the 
snares off (for Latin rhythms) 
at very high volumes. I did 
not find this while playing at 
normal volumes. I would 
attribute it to mounting the 
snare on a tom arm. I have to 
say that while it looked 
strange playing a snare 
mounted in this way, I quick¬ 
ly became quite comfortable 
with it. 

The bass drum measures 16" 
in diameter by 20" deep. This 
serves two purposes. It allows 


the case containing the toms and snare to be carried inside it, and it 
provides the sound of a much larger drum. This is one big -sounding 
bass drum! I was shocked the first time I played it. With your eyes 
closed you would swear it's a full-sized bass drum. 

Part of the "bigness" of the bass drum's sound is due to the fact 
that it's mounted on what Yamaha calls their "Floating Bass Drum 
System." This consists of standard Yamaha front legs that have 
been extended, and a riser on the batter side of the drum. Together, 
they lift the bass drum off of the floor by 5". This allows the beater 
of the bass pedal to strike the head in the middle. The rubber ball 
feet of the front legs can be turned so that a spike is exposed. The 
steel riser is shaped like a squared-off "U," and is slanted along 
the two top arms to match the curve of the bass drum shell. Two 
sets of wing nuts, screws, and washers attach the riser to the rear 
of the drum. Grommets (like those used for air holes) protect the 
shell where the riser attaches. The bottom of the riser is raised off 
the floor where the bass pedal clamps to it, and is lined with 
rubber for good contact. 

The throne is constructed with the same 7-ply shell as the 
drums, has five rubber feet for stability, and is finished to match in 
mellow yellow lacquer. You sit at a pre-determined height of 
20 1/2". The throne is just under 15" in diameter. The clips used to 
secure the seat portion to the top of the throne (like those used on 

the bass drum) are small but 
solid. They do the job and 
don't rattle. 

The tom and cymbal arms 
are standard Yamaha issue, as 
is the FP700 bass pedal. It does 
a very competent job of relay¬ 
ing your commands to the bass 
drum. The hi-hat, model HS- 
HG, is a standard hi-hat that 
has had the bottom tube cut 
short so as to fit into the throne. 
The footboard attaches to the 
base with spring rods, and there 
are spurs built into the base. 
The hi-hat has a good feel, and 
operates smoothly and quietly. 



The 16" bass drum includes a lifter to accommodate a pedal. 



MODERN DRUMMER JULY 1999 























within. 3. Lay out and assemble the drums and hardware, and 4. voila! 


In case you want to use a double bass pedal or a cowbell pedal 
with the HipGig, you can loosen the Allen screw on the lower por¬ 
tion of the hi-hat leg assembly. This allows you to rotate the legs 
to accommodate extra pedals. However, having tried it, I'm not 
sure that I would recommend the regular use of a double bass 
pedal. That's a lot to ask of a 16" head. The sound was okay, but it 
lacked definition. A slave pedal would also be another thing to 
carry, and it probably wouldn't fit into the throne case. 

I think that the real point of the HipGig set is that it offers an 
alternative for working drummers who don't always want or need 
to move their full-size kit, or certainly not all of it. The HipGig 
was designed to let you throw two cases and your cymbals into a 
sedan and play a musically satisfying night without needing forty- 
five minutes of setup time or having to fight for floor space. To 
show how workable it is, Peter Erskine is using the HipGig on tour 
with The Yellowjackets. He's adding a few cymbal stands, but 
otherwise he's using a stock version, stool and all. 

Here are some concerns that I discovered while working with 
the set. Please keep in mind that they refer to my perception of the 
setting and positioning of drums. You really need to check out the 
HipGig for yourself to see how you'd fit with it. 

I sat down and adjusted the snare first to the height and distance 
that seemed to work for me. I then tried setting up the small tom. I 
couldn't position it over the snare as I could on a full-size set (at 
least to my liking). I generally like to have my snare nestled under 
a small tom. If you are accustomed to playing on a bass drum that 
is 16" deep, be aware that the small tom and cymbals are 4" farther 
away on this bass drum. Add to that the fact that the mount on the 
bass drum is all the way at the front of the shell. 

When I tried to put the low tom down to the same height as the 
snare, the tom arms holding the snare and the low tom met inside 
the bass drum. I could actually do with the snare being slightly 
lower than it can go now. A solution would be to cut one of the 
long arms or purchase an additional short arm. 

Packing the hardware into the throne means that you have to 
collapse the cymbal arms and remove the boom rods. You can't 
leave them partially together, since they won't fit into the seat case 
that way. You can leave the boom tilters set at your angle, but 
your height setting will be lost. 



Moving the toms up and down the hex rod changes their timbre. 
The tone of the drums deepens as you move the rod farther out of 
the drums, and resonance increases as you move the rod farther in. 
When I had the rod fully inserted into the low tom, it had great 
resonance. Since the way you set up the drums will determine the 
resonance, I will say again that you need to check out the HipGig 
for yourself to experiment with these factors. 

The Yamaha HipGig set is a study in proportion and compro¬ 
mise. I'm sure that the company decided the size that the bass 
drum should be so that it could be considered "compact" and 
portable. Having determined this, they then designed a fine-sound¬ 
ing snare and toms that could fit inside. They also had to decide on 
a height for the throne that would accommodate the greatest num¬ 
ber of players. That factor determined the size and length of the 
hardware that went with the set. So although the HipGig' s porta¬ 
bility might be its most conspicuous feature, it's obvious that 
Yamaha made the sound quality of the drumset their first priority. 

The one thing that isn't quite as small as one might imagine on 
the HipGig is its price: $2,500 list. However, keep in mind that 
this isn't something that is "sort of a drumkit" or "a device to be 
used in place of a drumkit." This is a drumkit—one that you could 
play practically anywhere for any sort of gig with no apologies 
whatever. If portability and excellent sound seem like a good com¬ 
bination to you, you should definitely check out the HipGig. 



modern drummer 


JULV 1999 




















LP Udu Drum Retailers 


Mammoth Music 

goo E*si 5 th Avenue 
Anchorage, AK 9B50t 
007^72^94-1 
Mu6k Mart 
4i3 rWt&imei 
FaitoteAK 89701 
&G7-45£-2Q04i 


Chkiagc Slant 

130 E&k Oongmss] 

Tucson. a£ $5703 
£20-922-3341 

Milano Musk 

38 Wart Main Street 
Mess, A2S&20I 
6&-634-'6tt] 

Rainbow GuiSar 

2550 North Campbell Awfrnue 
Tuck-ti. AZ 85719 
C3W25-337S 

gUMUHA 

Charles Musk Center 

421 North Gtamtele Avenu* 
Giorttak, CAS 1206 
Si0-24S-e507 

Gek Muak 

/22 El C^tmho Real 

Redwood City, CA 34003 

Haight - Ashbury Music 

im KifcM £b««l j 

Sen FranciBw. DA#lt17 
415-563- 7327 

Lemmon PaTcuMlOn 
S20 W:lluW SlnM" # 200 ■ 

£nn Jovm C A 2® 125 

40&-28fr9l5O 

Marla'S Music 

m$ West Avenue K 
Lancaster. CA 93534 
661-9*243194 

Rhythm Fusion 
1541 C Pacific Avofiuo 
Sonia C-'ut, CA 9&QG0 
031^23,2048 

Sam Avh Music 

12651 Altesia Be- j I'jvri rd 

Cerrilos. CA S07C3 

ftfe-m-itor 

Shir* Music (rf Sanm Roes 

SI5 Ross Sreel 

Santa Rosa, CA 9S4G f "I 

707-S42-5G33 

UmirllW Pro DniM 

3298 Arf&Nnri Slneei 
Biirtte*y H CA 94703 
5t042M002 

COLORADO 
Douidtf* Drums 

15E0 Pnasi Street 

Bctmi.cn 

3O3-4Q2-0122 

FLORIDA 

Sam Ash Music 

5360 H.W. 5 07 SlrfiOl 
Miami FL 33014 
3O5-026-351U 

ObEOHQLA 

Alfcanta Drum & P*rcusston 

1176 N.E. Eapmssway 
All art?. QA 30329 
404-&33-407C 

mm 

Dorsey Musk 

HiSWna Statu Start 
Boise, FD 33703 
003-557*0097 

IOWA 

Ciiggi Music 

3649 Brady Street 
Diwipwl, iA 63806 

3 i«-»i-soao 

tLUHOW 

Andy's Music 

231 & Wesl BeSnwnE AvOiVua 

Chkaoo, il 0061 h 

773-665-1234 


ILLJJ4CH& (cant] 

Oiltorcm STrummor 
45*14 North Lnta4n A venue 
Chiton, IL 60GZ5 
773-rSSOOO 

■Drum Pad 

4& W&Sl Pataline Read 
PalHlinr?, IL 00067 
047-034-6768 

Mid WocjI Pfl ftuaalon 

Iftlff-C South Haricm Avenue 
Chicago IL 60*15 
7DM&23H 

The Sound Poei 
3040 Wflfll Ownpflflfif 
SkokiB, JL 04X178 
a47^67MD70 

HUMANA 

Woodwind and The Brasswind 
10880 S^flte Ltrve Ffeari 
Soulh fend, IN 46037 
31^72-8266 

Maine 

Poikjn& Music House 
RC. Box 46 US Route 202 
t.-lia vyimhroa M£ 04343 
2U74B544GD 

Port Land PancusailQn 
003 Foffisl Awanus 
Portland ME 04103 

507-774 -B1V. 

fLAHD 

hingrgn M u ale Center 
11151 Viera Mil I Ro J 
Mfcaton MD 2000 
3O1-946-0SO0 



iton Musk Co 

172 Tremcnt SlrwL 
Bo^Or i, MA D2H 1 
017-936-6120 

DA finder Music 

53 So-.. !M fi roadway 
law^ncB, MA 01043 
976-600-2300 

Mu«k Wall Inc 
033 Chelmsford SZnltft 
LOWell MA 01051 
970-452-55*4 

tJ7s Drums and Pmuillon 

247 Seulh Main Slra#t 
Fall Rivor. MA Q 2 ';.i 
503^73-0100 

MICHIGAN 
Rsrcu&sLon World 
53741 Woodward Avenue 
Fomda'e, ME 46220 
240-5*9-7020 

FU.T, Drums Ctnlral 
2015 Sdurh D.visijn Avenue 
Grand Raida, M 43S49 
616-243^7657 

Eii'-s DSmSbop 
194£. Ur^W*fsriy A^nue 
St Paul WN 55104 
051-00^00*8 

Minneapolis Drum Shoppe 
3013 Lpdato Avsnuu Sojlh 
Minntmpnik MN 55408 
612'B2f0?7t 

niUAlc ConrwcMtn 

77 6lh Avenue S.W 
Forest Lake, MN 55025 
65t-*$4-^252 

M95WRI 

Eitplorer'a Percuaaion 
00^0 VJomall Raad 
KsiiStfts City, MO 84114 
60^523-7067 

MONTANA 
Hensari Music 
1316 Gmnd AvflnU«i 
Bi^liga, MT 53102 
*064454544 

New HAN^Hme 

Macrosonie 

25 Com* Stieol 
ftitomauih, m 03801 
&O3-4GO-0038 


new j£RGTv 

Music C&nftral 

606 En-si Lencfe Avenue 
Vkolard NJ C3360 
609-692-^000 

njEehlfl 1 ! MubIc 
424 Roule 46 West 
RocKai^ay, r-iJ D7BB* 

973-825^500 

Sim A*h Music 

1331 Route 27 
Edracn.PW 06617 
732-572-559S 

Sant Aah Music 

21 GO FtoutU 3B 
Cher-v Hill, NJ 06002 
000W-&G0G 

9am Ash Music 

50 Eas^ fcjkd 4 
Paramus. NJ 07652- 
^0HS43^H9 


Alio Musk 

Bank Hem - 1060 Route 9 

Wappi™rs Falk, NT 120^3 
014-^7*0011 

Alta Music 
080 Rauije 211 East 
Midtfotoa-n, NT 1O0W 
914,0924322 

fiurralft Drum Oultel 
9^4 Waksen A'/snuo 
Bultelu. NT 1*211 
719-897-0950 

Drummeri World 
151 West 45ih S4m«l 
Now Tori, WY 10036 
212^0-3057 

Loud Joy me. 

17 South Village Avenue 
HK*W1HQ corjfe, NV 1157G 
516-793^49 

Me Mali Music 
4G17 Gkl Voslari 
Vestal, NT 1=3350 
$07-723-1545 

Sam Ash Myik 

3B5 QfO CoupTm Fkacl 
Cad& PtacB NY 11014 
510-333-8700 

Sam Ash Musk 

1B0W*N ^0|h Sln>t4 
New Vtrk, NY LOQ36 
212-'13-2G61 

The Only GuHflr Shop 

1774 Poijte 9 
ClillonParh NT 12060 
5>6 371-1232 

T-OHO import* 

215 North C^Uqa SttfOt 
Ithaca. NY 1485D 
60? '277 -3700 


: Will 

717 

fi! 



Duncan Music C&. 
l*ofl Soulh Slratt&rrf Road 
vAnBlgn-SdlBm, NC 27103 
33ft-Y$fr56e0 

Music Bern 

708 Ncrm vhurch Slreel 
Con&Mil NC 2B025 
704-732-6G13 

OHIO 

C.A r HovM Music 

62i7i Naiiunju ft-oad 
Si. OairBVlIte. OH 43960 
740-6^*5^9 

Ccriumbui Pro PureustloFT 
5052 North High Stmt 
Cblumhua. OFF43214 
614-BS5-7372 

Pnvo s Drum Depot 

41 oo M^nroa Siraei 

Toledo. OH *3606 
419-472-3788 

S^erisr Musk 

2035 Srstilh 3/rrie 
T-ulado, OH 43514 
419-381-0300 


OREGON 
Graaier Goods 

Gi&Hign Stwei 
Eugene. OR 9T«1 
54M9M224 

POmYLVANLA 
Cflrrtfo Muskal 
4&4 West Uhiq^ Avenue 
PWadwhlft. #19133 
21^2^7050 
Date's Drum Shop 
4410 Fritetwy Slrsflt 
HSftiUibiJfa PA 17109 
7l7-65£^&$6 
Fiphtb Slmt Musk 
1023 ArOh S^eai 
PWWBtpnra, RA W07 
215-92M940 

Howa rd Herbert Musk Center 

3725 FrankFjr: Ave^iie 
Philadelphia, PA 19136 
210-333-2543 

Medley Music C-c. 

10*1 Ijncaster Avenus 
Bryn Mawr, PA 1B010 
6lG*527.3f)0O 

Robert M, &kte* sfic, 

201 Mijkeny Sired 
VUMiAfHHri, PA 17701 
717-329*094 

Rpsew&ud Music 
0 CN&trwt Sireel 
nmfiuS, PA 1SQ49 
$1G-9&5-§2f 1 

Sam Asti Music 
I39£?st Dekalb Pike 
King of Prussia; PA 19406 
610*2i&-64*4 

Slave W*I89 MUSIC 
2324 ™npQt1e Road 
Widow Gr^. PA 10000 

£1£$5HB63 

Weddell's Drum Center 

601 CharliiifS Avonua 
MAesfi RucXS r RA S5136 
4 19-771 fell 

mV 

AiimO Musk Center 
425 Nfiflh MfliO Avenue 
Safi Arricr- L 1 , 76205 

210-224 ■ 1010 

Danny's Muak &tw 

041? Mem?™ Avwvue 
El Pspa TX 7#26 
9VpSs-1095 

He-u&ion PemiSskn Center 

100 Norlh Loop 
HcuSCcn. TX 77 003 
71 3-064-5O&0 

Soulh Texas Music Mart 

5253 South Stepres 
Corpus Christie, TX ?B411 
512-993-71306 

Strfllr Music Co, 

806 Wesl SCh Strg&l 
Amlirt TX 7B703 
512-178-632? 

VIRGINIA 
ArhOry Music 

4500 J&lm Ty4or HiQl'Wwiy 
WdllarnstHJrct, VA 231B8 
757-229-80 ?C? 


Bang I Mue-c 

201 -1-0 


261-107 Gamao.TMlIe Road 
SLaftcrd, VA 22554 
540-659-efi37 

WASHINGTON 
John's Music 

4501 Inle^akfi Narth ff & 
SedUfe. WA 93103 
206^4&M18 


Ce sci& J Inlowtetu Muek 

1381S Wasl Naliwial Av^nut 
Ncw&erlk Wl S3151 
(m)\ IN-A-BANH 




Today’s beautiful udu* drum began as a humble clay 

pot made to carry water. When a potter from the ancient ibo tribe in Nigeria 
inadvertently made a hole in the side of one of these pots, he discovered the 
earthy, haunting musical sounds he could make. 

The Udu Drum of today has become accessible to the world's percussionists 
through the efforts of one man, Frank Giorgini, Some 20 years ago, Giorgini 
began painstakingly hand crafting the clay drums using traditional Nigerian 
pottery techniques and engineering the Udus to acoustic perfection. As the 
demand for his handmade drums grew, Giorgini devised an unique system for 
producing them in greater quantities. Through a slip casting process, he 
produced his Claytone Series. Giorgini's Claytone Udu Drums are 
known the world over for their ingenious design, remarkable durability and 
consistent tonal quality. 

Now LP Music Group carries on that tradition and process to bring you 
Udu Drums with the same high quality construction and superior tones. 
Top percussionists the world over have discovered the wonderful authentic 
sounds they can achieve with LP Udu Drums. Ask tor them at your music retailer. 


Giovanni Hidalgo 
playing the 
LP Udu 
Claytone 3 



Play the Clay... the LP Udu Drum, 
the first choice of today's leading percussionists. 


Play the 



Don AI lab 
playing th< 
U> Udu 
Hfbwata 


MUSIC 

GROUP 


wwwJpmusie.com 
















story by Matt Peiken 


photos by Lance Mercer 


*3 

a 




Matt Cameron is one of the 
lucky ones: artistically and 
financially enriched by his 
brush with stardom, yet able 
to step away from it with his 
ego, spirit, and real life intact. 

Soundgarden's fortune, during 
the so-called grunge movement 
of the early '90s, allowed 
Cameron to buy a modest red 
brick home with hardwood 
floors and a basement studio in 
a mild suburb of Seattle. There 
he lives with his wife and long 
time companion, April, and 
their new son, Ray. 

Soundgarden's success also 
bought Cameron time—not a 
lifetime's worth, but enough to 
explore his muse, sink into the 
deep end of family life, and, 
closer to forty years old than 
he is to thirty, have fun with 
music again before he has to 
sweat the next paycheck. 





Some things, of course, had nothing to do with luck. 
As many drummers as there are in commercially suc¬ 
cessful bands, few earn reputations and accolades for 
helping to shape and define a style of drumming. Like 
John Bonham and Mitch Mitchell before him, 
Cameron has shown that heavy drumming doesn't 
have to be heavy-handed, that it can be expressive. 

His touch with a ghost note and fluid odd-time 
rhythms stamped a distinctive character into 
Badmotorfinger, Superunknown, and the one-time- 
only side project Temple Of The Dog. You know it's 
Cameron on the drums. And in this era of Pro Tools, 
that's an even greater gift to the ear. 

Cameron went through one of the roughest years of 


his life in 1997. His father died, his wife suffered a 
miscarriage, and his band broke up after more than a 
decade. Soundgarden still had much to say artistical¬ 
ly, Cameron says, but its spirit had blackened. By the 
time the band began touring for Down On The Upside, 
which proved to be their final album, the members 
had already aimed their attentions in other directions. 

Cameron's phone started ringing immediately. 
Smashing Pumpkins called. So did The Indigo Girls. 
Cameron performed in a tribute concert to Buddy 
Rich. And, of course, he parachuted into Pearl Jam to 
rescue a tour and live album. Pearl Jam has since 
asked Cameron to join them in the studio. 

Matt spent much of 1998, though, jamming with 

friends in the rehearsal studio he 
still co-owns with his former 
Soundgarden bandmates. There 
he indulged what has become his 
musical focus: Wellwater 
Conspiracy, a partnership with 
former Monster Magnet guitarist 
John McBain. 

There are two Wellwater 
Conspiracy records, both record¬ 
ed on the cheap 'n' easy in 
Cameron's rehearsal studio. The 
new disc, Brotherhood Of 
Electric: Operational Directive(s), 
is a Doors-ish bow to psychedelic 
pop, and it spotlights sides of 
Cameron that never before had 
an outlet. He wrote or co-wrote 
nearly every tune, played guitar 
on many of them, and lent lead 
vocals to a few. Matt's still trying 
to figure out how to pull it off on 
the road. 

As the record hit shelves earli¬ 
er this year, Cameron looked 
more relaxed, happy, and ener¬ 
gized than during any previous 
sit-down Modern Drummer inter¬ 
view. (This is his fourth.) He 
talked about the rise and fall of 
Soundgarden, his view of contem¬ 
porary rock drumming, and how, 
regardless of his musical future, 
he'll never let his drumsticks 
drop far from his hands. 



MODERN DRUMME ft JU L.Y 1 999 



MP: Soundgarden seemed in such a great position to build on its 
commercial and artistic success at the time of the breakup. What 
happened? 

MC: Creatively, I thought we were still viable and could do 
more records. But our working relationship just wasn't happen¬ 
ing at all, and our chemistry as people broke down because of 
that. No matter how much success you're having, you can't con¬ 
tinue working together if you can't communicate. I felt our 
chemistry had been crumbling for quite a while, probably about 
a year before we went in to do Down On The Upside. But I start¬ 
ed feeling the beginning of the end during those sessions. 

We didn't come into the studio as a cohesive unit, with all 
four cylinders turning. There were moments during that session 
when I felt, "Yeah, we're back. We know how to do this again." 
But we had some ideas we didn't fully pursue. There was a song, 
"Christy," that didn't make it on the record, but I thought it was 
one of the best things we'd ever done. I still felt we had some 
really good music on that record, but it seemed a shame that we 
couldn't make it better. And the tour was a total mess. We just 
had no life, no energy, and I felt we were going through the 
motions. 

When we finally decided to break up, it wasn't so much a 
shock as it was inevitable. But there was a twinge of sadness, 
too, because this was a band I'd dedicated myself to since the 
mid-'80s. In another sense, I felt very liberated and free, like a 
great weight had been lifted off my shoulders. I still feel like 
those guys are family, and I'm probably better friends with them 
now than I was toward the end of the band. 


MP: Was there any sense of panic, like, "What am I going to do 
now?" 

MC: No, I always knew I'd have other options, and I had 
enough confidence in myself that if I didn't get any calls, I could 
still do my own projects, like Wellwater. Even then, I knew the 
breakup of Soundgarden would be good for me, in that I could 
take a step back and think about what I really wanted to do and 
be free to rediscover myself as a musician. I didn't get a lot of 
calls, but it wasn't like I wanted to get picked up by another 
band, at least not right away. 

MP: Did you also see the breakup as an opportunity to take your 
drumming, and music in general, in other directions? 

MC: I ve always wanted to play lots of different styles of music. 
Soundgarden was a really good vehicle for me to dig into and let 
everyone's influences come out, and I never felt stifled by what 
we created musically as a band. A lot of times, when a band 
finds success with a certain style or sound, they have a really 
hard time breaking away from that to grow as artists. 

I think Soundgarden did a good job of reinventing itself some¬ 
what with each record. But I've always been the kind of drum¬ 
mer and musician who likes to go outside of what's expected of 
me, and I've always been able to do more than you necessarily 
hear with every band I've ever played in. When I was in 
Soundgarden—and I think John would say the same of Monster 
Magnet—there were certain roles we were expected to play. I'm 
not saying that's a negative at all, because my role in 
Soundgarden was very satisfying. But I've always known I 
could do more. 


"No matter how much success you're having, you can't 
continue working together if you can't communicate." 



W 

C 

2 

0 ) 


E 




Drumset: Ayotte WoodHoop series 

A. 7x14 Keplinger snare (or 6 1/2x14 or 8x14) 

B. 8x12 tom 

C. 9x13 tom 

D. 16x16 floor tom 

E. 18x18 floor tom 

F. 16x24 kick 


Cymbals: Zildjian 

1. 15" Khi-hats 

2. 19" Z Custom medium crash 

3. 21 "A Sweet ride 

4. 18" Z Rock crash 

5. 20" A Custom ride 


Hardware: DW 


Heads: Remo Emperors on batters, Ambassadors underneath 


Sticks: Vic Firth Matt Cameron model 


MODERN DRUMMER JULY \999 






DANNY CAREY 


Danny 

exclusively uses 

the TRUELINE 
Danny Carey 
model 







Danny Carey 



"Truefine's unique 
grip allows my 
hands to relax, 
while the sticks 
do the work." 



TrUeline- 

DRUMSTICKS 


\IRUEi 

VjJSA,/ 


Help you hang 


Mill Street * PO Box 300 
Northfield Falh,VT 05664 
Phone: 802*485*4900 
Fax 802*485*7800 


Going To The Well 

These are the records that Matt says best represent his playing: 

Artist 

Album 


Soundgarden 

Screaming Life 

Ultramega OK 

Louder Than Love 

Badmotorfinger 

Superunknown 

Down On The Upside 


Wellwater Conspiracy 

Declaration Of Conformity 



Brotherhood Of Electric: Operational Directive(s) 

Pearl Jam 

Live On Two Legs 


Hater 

Hater 


Temple OfThe Dog 

Temple OfThe Dog 


Tone Dogs 

Ankety Low Day 


Skin Yard 

Skin Yard 


And these are the ones he listens to for inspiration: 


Artist 

Album 

Drummer 

Stevie Wonder 

Innervisions 

Stevie Wonder 

Funkadelic 

Standing On The Verge 

Of Getting It On 

R. Tiki Fullwood 

David Bowie 

Low 

Heroes 

Station To Station 

Lodger 

Scary Monsters 

Young Americans 

Dennis Davis, Andy Newmark 

The Who 

Live At Leeds 

Keith Moon 

Queen 

A Night At The Opera 

Roger Taylor 

Captain Beefheart 

Trout Mask Replica 

Drumbo 

Miles Davis 

Milestones 

Philly Joe Jones 

John Coltrane 

A Love Supreme 

Elvin Jones 

Led Zeppelin 

all 

John Bonham 

Steely Dan 

Aja 

Steve Gadd, Paul Humphrey, 

Jim Keltner, Ed Greene, 

Rick Marotta, Bernard Purdie 

Faith No More 

all 

Mike Bordin 


MP: Hater [with former Soundgarden 
bandmate Ben Shepherd] was your first 
taste of that, wasn't it? 

MC: Yeah, as far as a rock audience hear¬ 
ing me in a different context. That was a 
major-label release, but I've always had 
weird little side projects going on. 

MP: How did you and John McBain build 
a creative relationship? 

MC: I met him back in '92 or '93, when 
Monster Magnet toured with us, and we 
found out that we were both into 4-track 
recording. I'd bought a 4-track cassette 
recorder back in '84, and that was com¬ 
pletely mind-expanding. So as far as my 
development as a musician, it was such a 
huge awakening to be able to write, record, 
re-write, re-record, and play out and hear 
my ideas. I think John had a similar love 
affair with the 4-track. 


Around '92, he and I got together to jam, 
write tunes, and do some 4-tracking, and 
after a while, we had a pile of songs. We 
had compatible ideas, like when we were 
writing songs, or constructing or arranging 
songs one of us had brought in, and our 
styles complemented each other. We were 
kinda doing this on the downtime of Hater. 
I eventually got a half-inch 8-track, and we 
dumped a lot of the stuff we'd done with 4- 
tracks onto that. That stuff was what made 
it onto the first Wellwater CD. 

MP: You obviously didn't create the new 
record by dumping 4-track demos onto 8- 
track. Tell me about the process of making 
the new record. 

MC: The big difference this time was that 
we knew we were going to make a CD 
before we started writing music. Even 
though we did write some of the music 


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'1 looked at the whole Pearl Jam thing as a really fun 
opportunity to do another big tour. I mean, if you're gonna 
tour, the big-money ones are the way to go." 


with 4-tracks, we wanted to get a bigger 
sound. I bought a 24-track machine and set 
up shop in the rehearsal space, but we still 
wanted to make the record pretty much in 
the same way we made the first one—just 
getting together with friends, drinking a 
couple beers, and recording. It's serious, 
but we didn't want it to be like work. We 
wanted to have fun with it. 

That's always the way I liked to make 
records, and there are ways to do that with¬ 
in a band. But if you have outside pressures 
foisted on that band, it’s hard to cut that all 
away and just have fun. For me and John, 
we had absolutely no outside pressures. We 
just wanted to see what we could do for our 
second record. I had complete songs, John 
had complete songs, and Josh Homme 
helped us write some things. We didn't 
want to be too delicate with our music, and 
we brought in different friends here and 
there to do their thing and make it better. 

Most of the songs were recorded initially 
with just John and I—me on drums and 
John on guitar—so we could get the drum 
track. Then we'd add everything else on 
top of that. There's a song called "Van 
Vanishing" that was recorded with a click. 
I recorded keyboard, guitars, and bass, and 
then I put the drums on last. What's good 
is that John and I aren't locked into one 
way of recording, like having the "drum 
track week," so we felt free to experiment 
one song at a time. 

MP: Were there any fundamental differ¬ 
ences between how you recorded your 
drums with Well water and how you gener¬ 
ally did drum tracks with Soundgarden? 
MC: Well, we're definitely not going to 
earn any production awards for this record. 
I've had engineer friends come in and give 
me pointers on setting up mic's and using 
different compressors. We do it all pretty 
much on the fly—throw up some micro¬ 
phones and, if it sounds like our instru¬ 
ment, we'll go. There wasn't a whole lot of 
second-guessing along the way, but now 
that I listen back on it, I know I could have 
gotten a way better sound. 

For instance, I felt I could have had a 


better presentation of low end, especially 
on the kick drum and bass guitar. These 
days, with big-budget records, you use two 
tracks to record the kick drum, but I only 
used one. So basically, I'm missing that 
second track that would have added some 
bottom end. But I felt confident to be able 
to do what I needed to, sound-wise, from 
the experiences I had with Soundgarden, 
and even through the 4-tracking. 

With 4-tracks you learn about levels and 
mixing. You can do it all on your own, and 
then when you go into a more organized 
session, you already have a foundation of 
knowledge about setting up a mic' to get a 
good kick drum sound. Little things can 
make such a big difference during record¬ 
ing. Adam Kasper, a buddy of mine, came 
in and threw up a second mic' on the kick 
drum and it sounded huge. We're not really 



about getting perfect studio sounds. For 
Wellwater, what we get here in the 
rehearsal studio is fine. 

MP: Can you hear a growth or evolution in 
your playing from the later Soundgarden 
records to the new Wellwater Conspiracy 
record? 

MC: There were a lot of similarities, 
because with each situation, I never had 
any outside critiques of my playing. But I 
think my playing was a little simpler with 
Wellwater. I didn't just play the role of 
drummer, so I was thinking more about the 
finished product, as far as vocals and the 
orchestration, than I did when I laid down 
tracks for a Soundgarden record. 

But I don't think that distracted me from 
doing what I needed to do as a drummer. If 
anything, it was liberating because I felt 
like I was able to play more off-the-cuff, a 
little more loosely, instead of sweating the 
drum tracks as the drummer of a band 
would do. It was maybe even more fun to 
play drums under these circumstances, but 
musically it may not be as meaty as a 
Soundgarden record. Wellwater is a little 
upbeat, a little lighter—not as much junk in 
the trunk, so to speak—a little more of a 
party record. 

MP: You've known the guys in Pearl Jam 
for a long time, but how did your playing 
with them come about? 

MC: I guess it was April or May of '98. I 
gave Stone [Gossard, Pearl Jam guitarist] 
some Wellwater songs to listen to, because 
he has a record label. I called him one time 
and Eddie [Vedder] picks up the phone and 
says, "Hey, what are you doing this sum¬ 
mer?" and I told him I was just gonna be 
recording with John and bangin' out with 
April, because she was pregnant then. 
That's when they told me Jack [Irons] 
bailed out of the tour pretty abruptly, pretty 
late in the game. They asked me if I was 
interested in stepping in, and I said yeah, it 
sounded like a gas. 

MP: Did you have to think about it for a 
while? You'd just stepped out of a big 
thing and had some good reasons to stick 
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MC: I looked at the whole Pearl Jam thing 
as a really fun opportunity to do another 
big tour. I mean, if you're gonna tour, the 
big-money ones are the way to go. I've 
slept next to too many catboxes in my day 
to wanna go back to that. Pearl Jam is real¬ 
ly well-organized and it turned out to be 
one of the most enjoyable tours I've ever 
been on. The mood was more upbeat, and 
those guys really enjoy playing live, which 
was a new experience for me. 

Soundgarden didn't like playing live at 
all, except in the early days. Once things 
started exploding for us, we were never 
really able to catch up with our emotions, 
in a way. We never sat down and worked 
on the things we needed to, to keep our 
band healthy. We'd look at a tour sheet 
with six or eight months of dates on there, 
and if your band isn't healthy to begin 
with, that makes it that much worse. I think 
some bands just aren't totally comfortable 
when they take it to the stage, and I think 
Soundgarden was one of those bands. 

Initially, when we were doing our van 
tour, we were pretty kick-ass. But Chris 
[Cornell, singer] was really, really 
scared—well, not scared, but he had some 


comfort issues about going on stage. 
Towards the end, I thought he really found 
himself on stage and became a really good 
performer. But with Pearl Jam, it was real¬ 
ly fun to be in that environment. It was a 
huge arena rock tour—every arena was 
sold out. They had a jet. They had their 
own cook. I got to use Jack's wardrobe 
case. Now, Soundgarden got to a pretty 
high level, but it was nothing compared to 
how Pearl Jam does things. They're just a 
hugely popular band, and it was really 
interesting to see how low-key they kept it, 
but still do great shows and make everyone 
happy. 

MP: How was the musical mix between 
you and Pearl Jam? 

MC: It was great in the sense that they 
didn't try to tone me down at all. I'm kind 
of known for playing weird, crazy fills and 
sometimes playing things I shouldn't be 
playing, but they loved it—at least that's 
what they told me. They just wanted me to 
do what I do. But musically, Pearl Jam is 
one of those bands where everyone sup¬ 
ports the vocal. The vocal is the main 
instrument and everything else takes a back 
seat. 


It's not something I'm unable to do, but 
coming from Soundgarden and now with 
Wellwater, I like my drum parts to be inte¬ 
gral to the songs—hugely integral. Pearl 
Jam is just a different animal, but it was 
good for me to work in that realm because 
it forced me to re-approach and re-examine 
the way I play. 

MP: Were you happy with the live record? 
MC: Yeah. I think the song selection on 
the disc is a little sleepy at times, because 
there were definitely more rockers on that 
tour, but they probably chose those songs 
because of the sound or some other reasons 
I'm not sure of. I know some of my tempos 
were a bit faster than they were used to, 
and maybe that has something to do with it. 
But overall, I think it came out great. 

MP: What are the chances of your joining 
Pearl Jam on a permanent basis? 

MC: As of right now, I can't really envi¬ 
sion joining a major band like that, espe¬ 
cially an established band. It just doesn't 
seem completely right for me, for what I 
want to do. I'm trying to get my own thing 
going, as a person and a musician. That's 
why Wellwater fits so perfectly for me. 

MP: As you go along with Wellwater and 




other projects, do you think drumming is 
going to become less important or less of a 
singular focus as you delve more into song¬ 
writing, singing, and playing other instru¬ 
ments? 

MC: No, because I've been pursuing all 
those things pretty much since high school. 
And I think a lot of my music and ideas 
come from playing drums. I approach 
song writing very rhythmically. It's really 
hard for me to sit down and write a folk 
song. I just can't do it. My music is more 
riff-based, and it takes me a while to come 
up with something I like. 

I'm known for being a drummer, and 
I'm grateful for that. I was really lucky to 
be able to grow as a drummer in 
Soundgarden and other bands I've played 
in. But I also think it's important as a musi¬ 
cian to expand into other areas, be it song¬ 
writing or production or whatever. I'm just 
trying to find another tool as an artist and 
expand on the tools I already have. 

MP: What are you going to do about 
spreading yourself between drums, guitar, 
and vocals when Wellwater Conspiracy 
goes on the road? 

MC: I m not sure yet. We've done two 


shows so far where I played drums and 
sang, and it was tough. You can't project 
your vocals as well, or play drums as well, 
when you're clumping the two together. So 
we're still working out different scenarios. 

Actually, we've got a list of guys who 
said they'd be interested to go out with us 
when they aren't busy with their main gigs. 
So we're trying to get a main group of peo¬ 
ple together and then have understudies for 
when they're out with their own bands. I 
got a call from Taylor Hawkins, who heard 
our CD and said he'd be up for going out 
with us when he isn't busy, so that was 
really cool. 

MP: You mentioned drums being the root 
of much of your song writing, and that's 
interesting because you're one of the few 
contemporary rock drummers who seem to 
compose music or songs strictly through 
their parts. "Wooden Jesus" from Temple 
Of The Dog comes to mind as a classic 
Cameron beat and song. 

MC: That's an important point, to be able 
to play drums Compositionally. You hear it 
in jazz all the time. That's how jazz drum¬ 
mers approach the instrument, and I've 
always appreciated that approach, to have 


it be musical. Actually emoting or express¬ 
ing your feelings on the drums is a pretty 
difficult thing to do. Guys like Elvin Jones 
and Tony Williams did it all the time, but 
you don't hear it often in a rock setting. 
MP: Do you think the very nature of rock 
music makes it difficult to truly express 
yourself as a drummer? 

MC: No. That's what I've tried to do, 
where the drum parts fit with the music so 
well that those parts become music in their 
own right. I think "Pretty Noose," off the 
last Soundgarden record, is a good example 
of what I'm talking about, where all the 
parts worked well together. I never really 
sat down and studied the songs to work out 
my parts, and I clearly don't have it all fig¬ 
ured out. But that's always been my 
approach, and it eventually became sec¬ 
ond-nature. 

Of course, the opportunities to do that 
depend a lot on the band you're in. I was 
fortunate to be in a band like Soundgarden, 
which had such interesting takes on rock 
songs. A lot of times, my drum parts added 
to that whole weird dimension we were 
working in. Bands like KISS and AC/DC 
and even Pearl Jam require different things 


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from a drummer. 

MP: You told me you sometimes still 
come to your studio by yourself just to play 
drums. Are you working on new licks or 
anything else tied to your playing? 

MC: No, I'm so out of touch with current 
licks, and I haven't sat down and specifi¬ 
cally tried to learn any new fills in a long 
time. Sometimes I'll try to work out differ¬ 
ent ways of doing things I'm already play¬ 
ing, but not that often because I'll eventu¬ 
ally just forget it and go back to the way 
I'm used to playing. I used to sit down and 
try learning different beats. But now, most 
of the time, I'm just playing. I think I've 
reached a point in my playing where I 
know I can take it into a lot of different sit¬ 
uations, different types of bands. 

MP: I interview so many guys who say 
they can't stand to even look at their kits 
when they're not on tour or in the studio. 
What's your motivation these days? 

MC: Playing drums is just fun. If I don't 
play drums for a week or two, my body 
doesn't feel right. I think I'm so addicted to 
it and it's so important to my life that I go 
through withdrawal if I don't play for a 
while. But I understand about not wanting 


to play when you play every night for a liv¬ 
ing. I was the same way when I was on the 
road with Soundgarden. 

You definitely need a break if the drums 
are your sole existence 24/7 for ten months 
out of the year. When you get into tour 
mode—and doing videos and other things 
on top of that—it can totally drain you of 
your joy for making music. But I never lost 
my love of the instrument. These days, a 
lot of newer bands come in and just want to 
be successful, and there's no dedication to 
bettering themselves at their music or their 
instrument. 

MP: Do you think that's why a lot of 
bands cut tracks with Pro Tools, just so 
they can take the easy, efficient route to so- 
called perfection? 

MC: I think you can make any hack band 
or drummer sound really tight with the 
right gear. A lot of the major-label bands 
these days don't necessarily get it all fig¬ 
ured out before they step into the studio, 
but they have this cushion that allows them 
to be at a level that isn't professional yet. 
I've been doing some sessions lately where 
I'm playing to a click track and I know the 
producer's going to cut up the drum part. 


I think a lot of it is just how people are 
hearing drums these days. The current rock 
audience is being brought up on that com¬ 
puter-enhanced sound, and they have this 
narrow idea of what rhythm is. These days, 
it's more about a beat or an effect or a 
sound. So a drummer can go in and do 
whatever he does, with the producer know¬ 
ing he can use Pro Tools to fix it all up. 

I'm from the school of knowing how to 
play what you want on your record—how 
to edit yourself. What I mean by editing 
yourself is being able to make the music 
work as you're performing it, and not rely¬ 
ing on post-production to clean up your 
work. 

MP: Is that simply a matter of mastering 
your instrument, or is it enough to ignore 
the pressure to make a "perfect" record? 
MC: What's really helped me with 
Soundgarden and the other projects I've 
been involved with is being really confi¬ 
dent in my drum parts before I go into the 
studio. You can do that during rehearsals 
or pre-production, and there should always 
be room to experiment in the studio, while 
you're making the record. But these days, 
it seems like you don't have to have the 




MODERN DRUMMER JULY \999 









whole picture in mind when you're record¬ 
ing. You can take a snippet from bar two 
and stick it in bar twenty-two. 

The way I approach it is I'm trying to 
create a performance that makes sense 
musically and put my parts together in an 
interesting way, and I'm always trying to 
think conceptually. All that seems to be 
overlooked these days because you can do 
tricks and fills with the computer. 
Therefore, a lot of the younger bands com¬ 
ing up now have never had to rely on their 
musicianship to make records, to propel the 
music and have it be an interesting perfor¬ 
mance. Pro Tools can clean up anything, 
but it can't make a performance more 
vibrant or soulful. I'm not saying I'm bet¬ 
ter and they're worse for the way I do 
things and the way they do things. It's just 
a different approach. 

MP: But the danger, from what you're say¬ 
ing, is that editing equipment can become a 
crutch and stunt your growth as a musician, 
especially for younger guys just out of the 
chute. 

MC: There's a couple of different schools 
of thought. One way people use Pro Tools 
is as a tape machine, and it's a pretty amaz¬ 


ing piece of gear in that sense. You can 
record straight into a computer and use all 
the plug-ins and editing capabilities, all the 
sound-effect options, and you do it all right 
on the spot. Chris is recording his record 
that way. I bought Pro Tools for myself in 
'97, when I thought I'd do a solo record 
from my basement. I got a couple songs 
into it, but it was so draining to keep look¬ 
ing into that computer screen—these little 
blips and bleeps and squiggles—that I just 
didn't see it as music after a while. It 
became this scientific, technological thing, 
and it really fatigued me. It even affected 
the sound. When I went back to a tape 
machine, I just felt a lot more at home. 

I have the music in my head before I put 
it on tape, so I'm able to get by without the 
tricks and bonuses of a Pro Tools system. I 
was thinking about selling my system, but I 
talked to Jack Endino about it and he sug¬ 
gested using Pro Tools for mixing down to 
a JAZ disc, rather than ending up with a 
pile of tapes. I know I haven't used Pro 
Tools to its full potential—I was probably 
even doing it wrong—but I just didn't have 
a good experience. 

MP: Aside from your technological experi¬ 


ments, have you experimented at all with 
different drumkits and setups? 

MC: I'm always fooling around with my 
sound and my kit, using different tunings. 
I'll throw various cymbals up there to try 
different combinations of pitch. But my 
setup is pretty basic, and I like to keep it 
that way. I played DW for a long time, and 
now I'm playing Ayotte drums. I went to 
steel hoops for a while because I was hit¬ 
ting the rims a lot and I just didn't feel 
comfortable with the wood hoops, but now 
I'm back to wood. 

MP: Are you looking for a drum sound 
that's distinct to Wellwater Conspiracy, in 
contrast to what you were going for with 
Soundgarden? 

MC: I'm interested in the sounds of the 
'70s, something more raw and natural, as 
opposed to what I'm hearing today—a lot 
of triggering and generic tones that don't 
even sound like real drums. Some people 
do the techno thing really well. What Trent 
Reznor does with drum sounds is really 
interesting. 

But if you listen to any given song on a 
modern rock station and then listen to a 
Bob Seger tune, there's just no comparison 



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as far as I’m concerned. I think I was going 
for those older sounds to a certain extent 
even with Soundgarden, but the very nature 
of how we made the Well water records 
made it easier to just let the drums speak 
for themselves. 

MP: Tell me about the Buddy Rich tribute 
concert. 

MC: It was really fun, but I was sweating 
bullets, boy. I played with the Buddy Rich 
Big Band, like a 16- or 18-piece band. It 
was in New York City, and the other drum¬ 
mers there were JR Robinson, David 
Garibaldi, Billy Cobham, Sonny Emory— 
all these heavyweights. Each of us played 
two songs—I forgot their names—but one 
was pretty involved, with a drum solo, and 
the other was a swing tune. 

Cathy Rich first called me about it while 
Soundgarden was on tour, and they sent me 
off some sheet music of a couple songs 
they felt I'd be right for. They were Buddy 
Rich's version of playing rock, which I 
hate to say were pretty hokey. He was one 
of the greatest big band drummers of all 
time, but his rock chops were a little 
hurtin' at times. They gave me these hip 
big band rock arrangements, but I found a 


couple really cool, more traditional big 
band tunes and told them I wanted to play 
those. So they sent me the trumpet lead 
sheets and I practiced every day trying to 
get that stuff down. 

We did one rehearsal and played that 
night. It was a total drummer's showcase, 
with the drumset up front. There were 
about a thousand, maybe fifteen hundred 
people there. Will Lee was playing bass, 
and he and a lot of the guys in the orchestra 
came up to me afterward and said I'd done 
a great job with it. My wife, April, was 
there, and she told me I was the loudest of 
all the drummers, for whatever that's 
worth. I know there were a lot of jazz 
purists up front, because after I finished 
playing, everybody was clapping but they 
just sat there with their arms folded, like, 
"How dare you soil Buddy's reputation?" 
It was pretty funny to see the snob element 
there, but everybody else was totally cool. 

It was a humbling experience, just to be 
invited, and I was so flattered. It was such 
a challenge for me to go in there and pull it 
off, and I thought I did a good job. Again, 
it just goes back to having the confidence 
to do something like that, which is some- 


MATT CAMERON 



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thing I've developed through my experi¬ 
ences over the years. When you're count¬ 
ing off time with the Buddy Rich Big 
Band, you have to be totally confident so 
that they have confidence in you. 

MP: What involvement do you have on 
Chris Cornell's solo record? 

MC: Probably not as much as I'd like. I 
recorded one song when I was down in LA 
this past summer, and I got to hear two or 
three others. But the whole thing felt kinda 
strange to me. I feel kinda like Chris is my 
brother and I don't want him to use any 
other drummer but me, like, "How dare 
you play with Josh Freese?" Once I heard 
the music, it made perfect sense, but 
there's still this familial tug. I know it's 
totally irrational. 

MP: Well, maybe not irrational, but unrea¬ 
sonable. Then again, you were the only 
drummer he'd played with during the past 
umpteen years, the only drummer for his 
music. 

MC: And I felt I was the best for his 
music. Then when I heard Josh Freese 
playing the music so amazingly, it was 
pretty humbling. But you can use the anal¬ 
ogy of getting a divorce. When you see 


your ex-wife with someone else, even 
though you're divorced, there's still a 
twinge in your gut. I wanted to be on that 
record and I was really glad they asked me, 
just to have a continuance of our musical 
chemistry, which I still think is strong. 

MP: You told me there were many times 
when Soundgarden felt more like a job 
than fun. Would you ever want to go back 
to a major-label, major-money situation 
like that? 

MC: I would have to feel like I was a big 
part of things to get into that mindset again. 
We had outside pressures on us and we had 
to do things that we didn't control. The 
great thing about Well water Conspiracy is 
we did it all ourselves. It was validating to 
have a record in the aftermath of 
Soundgarden—not to appeal to 
Soundgarden fans or to drumming fans, but 
to prove that I could keep playing and 
developing. It showed me you can put out 
a CD, do all the press, do all the working 
of it, and still have fun. But I'm also thirty- 
six now, and it's time for adulthood. 

My family responsibilities have grown 
tremendously. I'm still lazier than I should 
be. I mean, there's work around the house I 


could be doing, and if I really wanted to 
pursue it, I could do a lot more session 
work. But when you're in a successful rock 
band, you're allowed to have this arrested 
development as a human being. Everything 
is done for you, and you're put on a 
pedestal, like this decorated hero—and that 
can mess with your sense of who you are. I 
think I lost a lot of perspective toward the 
tail end of Soundgarden, because things 
were breaking down but we were still put 
on these pedestals. But now I've shed that 
whole skin and I'm settling into more of a 



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mo ’99 ■ 

Readers! 

Poll 

Results! 



HONOR ROLL 

MD's Honor Roll consists of 
those drummers and percussion¬ 
ists whose talent, musical 
achievements, and lasting popu¬ 
larity placed them first in MD's 
Readers Poll in the categories 
indicated for five or more years. 
We will include these artists, 
along with those added in the 
future, in each year's Readers 
Poll Results as our way of hon¬ 
oring these very special per¬ 
formers. This year, we are 
pleased to add Mike Portnoy 
to the Honor Roll in the 
Progressive Rock category, 
in recognition of his five 
consecutive wins from 1995 
through 1999. 


HALL OF FAME 


1999: ROY HAYNES 
1998: Ringo Starr 

1997: Terry Bozzio 

1996: Vinnie Colaiuta 
1995: EMn Jones 

1994: Larrie Londin 

1993: Jeff Porcaro 

1992: Max Roach 

1991: Art Blakey 

1990: Bill Bruford 

1989: Carl Palmer 

1988: Joe Morello 

1987: Billy Cobham 
1986: Tony Williams 

1985: Louie Bellson 
1984: Steve Gadd 

1983: Neil Peart 
1982: Keith Moon 
1981: John Bonham 
1980: Buddy Rich 

1979: Gene Krupa 

ALEX ACUNA 

VINNIE COLAIUTA 

NEIL PEART 

Latin/Brazilian Percussion 

All-Around; Studio 

Rock; Multi-Percussion 

AIRTO 

PHIL COLLINS 

TITO PUENTE 

Latin American and 

Pop/Mainstream Rock 

Percussionist 

Latin/Brazilian Percussion 

PETER ERSKINE 

MIKE PORTNOY 

KENNY ARONOFF 

Mainstream Jazz 

Progressive Rock 

Pop/Mainstream Rock 

VIC FIRTH 

BUDDY RICH 

EDDIE BAYERS 

Classical Percussion 

Big Band 

Country 

STEVE GADD 

EDSHAUGHNESSY 

LOUIE BELLSON 

All-Around; Studio 

Big Band 

Big Band 

DAVID GARIBALDI 

STEVE SMITH 

GARY BURTON 

R&B/Funk 

All-Around 

Mallet Percussion 

LARRIE LONDIN 

LARS ULRICA 

DENNIS CHAMBERS 

Country 

Hard Rock 

Electric Jazz; Funk 

ROD MORGENSTEIN 

DAVE WECKL 

ANTHONY J.CIRONE 

Rock/Progressive Rock 

Electric Jazz 

Classical Percussion 


TONY WILLIAMS 

Jazz/Mainstream Jazz 


MODE R N DRUMMER J L) LY 1999 











ALL-AROUND 
ROD MORGENSTEIN 

2. Carter Beauford 

3. Kenny Aronoff 

4. Anton Fig 

5. Dennis Chambers 


STUDIO 
KENNY ARONOFF 

2. Matt Chamberlain 
3. Jim Keltner 
4. Vinnie Colaiuta 
5. John M J.R." Robinson 


ELECTRIC JAZZ 
WILLIAM KENNEDY 

2. Billy Cobham/Steve Smith 

3. Billy Martin 

4. Joel Rosenblatt 


MAINSTREAM JAZZ 
BILL STEWART 

2. Jack DeJohnette 
3. Marvin "Smitty" Smith 
4. Jeff Hamilton 
5. Brian Blade/Roy Haynes 


BIG BAND 
BERNIE DRESEL 

2. Phil Collins 

3. Marvin "Smitty" Smith 

4. John Riley 

5. Max Weinberg 


POP/MAINSTREAM ROCK 
CARTER BEAUFORD 

2. Cindy Blackman 
3. Ricky Lawson 
4. Larry Mullen Jr. 
5. Gary Novak/Shawn Pelton 


HARD ROCK 
DAVID SILVERIA 

2. Danny Carey 

3. Matt Cameron/Tommy Lee 

4. Peter Criss/Vinnie Paul/Alex Van Halen 





MODE R H DR UMMER JULY 1 999 

















Rick Malkin Paul La Raia 



PROGRESSIVE ROCK 
MIKE PORTNOY 

2. Terry Bozzio 

3. Danny Carey / Virgil Donati/David Silveria 


R&B 

RICKY LAWSON 

2. Sonny Emory 
3. Zoro 

4. Steve Ferrone/Herman Matthews 



COUNTRY 
LONNIE WILSON 

2. Paul Leim 

3. Dony Wynn 

4. Billy Mason 

5. Mike Palmer 


UP& COMING 
DAVID SILVERIA [Korn] 

2. Scott Phillips (Creed) 
3. Mike Mangini (Steve Vai) 
4. Josh Freese (Guns 'N Roses) 
5. Billy Martin (Medeski, Martin & Wood) 



PERCUSSIONIST 
GIOVANNI HIDALGO 

2. Fuis Conte 

3. Evelyn Glennie 

4. Fenny Castro 

5. Glen Velez 


RECORDED PERFORMANCE 

NEIL PEART 

RUSH: DIFFERENT STAGES 

2. Carter Beauford—Dave Matthews Band: 

Before These Crowded Streets 
3. Mike Portnoy—Fiquid Tension Experiment: 

Liquid Tension Experiment 
4. Mike Portnoy—Dream Theater: 

Once In A Livetime 
5. Dave Weckl—The Dave Weckl Band: 

Rhythm Of The Soul 


In order to present the results of our Readers Poll, the votes were tabulated and the top five names in each category listed here. 
In the event a tie occurred at any position other than fifth place, all names in that position were presented and fifth place was 
eliminated. When a tie occurred at fifth place, all winning names were presented. 





READERS POLL SUBSCRIPTION GIVEAWAY 

In appreciation for the participation of MD's readership in this year's poll, three ballots were drawn at random to determine the 
winners of a Flashback Tee and a Pit Stop Cap from MD's Classic Casuals line. Those winners are Tom Chute of Iowa City, Iowa, 
Dave Gibson El of Allentown, Pennsylvania, and Jackie Madsen of Tallahassee, Florida. Congratulations from Modem Drummer! 



MODERN DRUMMER JULY 1999 


Alex Solca 


















EDITORS' ACHIEVEMENT AWARD 

This award is given by the editors of Modern Drummer in recognition of outstanding contribution to the 
drum/percussion community by a performer, author, educator, manufacturer, etc. The persons so honored 
may be notable figures in drumming history or active participants on today's scene. The criteria for this 
award shall be the value of the contribution(s) made by the honorees, in terms of influence on subsequent 
musical styles, educational methods, or products. There will be no limit as to the number of honorees that 
may be designated each year. 

For 1999, MD's editors are pleased to honor: 


Katsumi, Mitsuo, and Masani Yanagisawa 

Just after World War II, a Japanese violin player and teacher named Katsumi Yanagisawa 
opened a side business making music stands. A friend suggested that he expand into making 
drums. Katsumi obtained some American-made snare drums, copied them, and in 1950 
launched his business—which he called Pearl Industry Ltd. 

From those inauspicious beginnings, Katsumi expanded the fledgling operation—first into 
a supplier of drums for others, and later into a manufacturer of drums strictly under the Pearl 
name. Katsumi's sons Mitsuo and Masani (current Pearl president and vice president, respec¬ 
tively) have continued to guide the growth of the company, including moving the main facto¬ 
ry to an enormous facility in Taiwan in 1973 in order to meet the increasing demand for per¬ 
cussion products worldwide. Since then, the Yanagisawa brothers have kept their focus on 
innovation and value, with such products as the original Jeff Porcaro Drum Rack and the 
incredibly successful Export drumkit. As a result, today Pearl is the world's largest company 
dedicated exclusively to the manufacture of drums and percussion equipment. 



Benny Benjamin, Pistol Allen, and Uriel Jones 

Collectively and individually, these three gentlemen helped to create and define a style of 
music that set America's youth in motion during the 1960s: the Motown sound. As the house 
drummers for Berry Gordy's famous label, Pistol, Benny, and Uriel laid the grooves behind 
such chart-toppers as The Supremes, The Temptations, Smokey Robinson & The Miracles, 
The Four Tops, Stevie Wonder, and The Jackson Five. Combining rhythmic simplicity with 
an inescapable intensity, the Motown dmmmers took R&B from the streets of Detroit and 
turned it into the pulse of a generation. 



Vic Firth 



Vic Firth is one of the percus¬ 
sion industry's renaissance 
men. As principal timpanist 
with the Boston Symphony 
Orchestra for more than thirty 
years, he has performed under 
the batons of Leonard 
Bernstein, Arthur Fiedler, and 
Seiji Ozawa (among others), 
while setting the standard for 
excellence on his challenging 
instrument. As an instmctor at 
the New England Conserv¬ 
atory of Music, he has been 
instrumental in guiding gener¬ 
ations of percussion students 
in their development toward 
becoming top professionals. 
As an educator, he has 
authored valuable tutorial 
works on timpani and snare 
drum. 

Vic has always been con¬ 
cerned with giving drummers 
what they need to succeed. 
With that in mind, many years 
ago he created some hand¬ 
made drumsticks in his 
garage, which he gave to some 
of his students as an improve¬ 
ment over the commercially 
available sticks of the day. 
Those sticks proved so popu¬ 
lar that Vic soon found him¬ 
self in the drumstick business 
(with his children hand-stamp¬ 
ing and bagging the early 
models). That little "sideline" 
has since evolved into one of 
the world's largest and most 
respected drumstick and 
accessory businesses. 



MCOtA m DRUMMER JULY 1993 















CONGRATULATIONS 





PAUL LEIM 

ttsnmttwwt 


EMORY 


WECKL 


JOHN RILEY 

m&ssmm'.if 


l -. HIDALGO 

WINNIR 


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grooves 

that 

shook 

the 

world: 



by loro and Allan "Dr. Licks"Slutsky 















nyone with an appreciation for the finer 
nuances of street life would have thought 
the album cover of Marvin Gaye's clas¬ 
sic LP I Want You had come to life. It 
was all here, brother. Dr. Flash Beaver, a 
self-styled choreographer and street 
dancer well into his seventies, parted the 
smoky haze with his pearl-handled walking cane, as he walked 
through the crowd decked out in a flashy white suit. With faces 
ranging from Billy Dee Williams "stop your heart" looks to the 
oversized alien heads of the reed players in the Star Wars canti¬ 
na, a half-dozen saxophonists stood by the side of the stage 
waiting to take their turn. And of course, there was the host for 
the evening, Lottie "The Body," the most famous stripper/bur¬ 
lesque star of the '50s, looking ravishing as ever as she greeted 
the club's patrons with her ever-present smile. 


The uninitiated might have thought 
they'd walked onto the set of a Fellini 
film. But music fans in Detroit were used 
to the colorful characters that showed up 
every Wednesday night for the open jam 
session at Bomax's. But this wasn't just 
any Wednesday night. When the band¬ 
leader abruptly stopped the musical pro¬ 
ceedings on stage and announced, "Ladies 
and Gentlemen, we have a genius in the 
house," they knew something momentous 
was about to happen. From the moment 
the trim, bespectacled figure emerged 
from a darkened corner of the club, sat 
down behind the drums, and launched into 
the snare drum pick-up that began Martha 
& The Vandellas' mega-hit "Heatwave," 
you knew exactly who he was. It was 
unmistakable. It was him. 

The drummer was Richard "Pistol" 
Allen, one third of a triumvirate of 
groundbreaking Motown drummers 
whose grooves and innovations have 
formed the backbone of modern R&B, 
pop, and funk. In spite of being shrouded 
in anonymity, these three men's life's 
work and their bared musical souls have 
been the backdrop for all of our lives—the 
film score, so to speak, behind our every¬ 
day existence. We've all danced and par- 
tied to "Heat Wave," "Shotgun," and 
"Ain't Too Proud To Beg." Countless 
backseat Romeos tried making their best 
moves with "Ooh Baby Baby" or "My 
Cherie Amour." Even as far away as 


Southeast Asia, US soldiers were able to 
find solace from "What's Going On" as 
they shivered in some God-forsaken, 
muddy foxhole. 

But despite the global impact of 
Motown music, these monumentally 
important drummers have been over¬ 
looked and essentially written out of 
music history for the last forty years. Who 
were these unsung heroes of the groove, 
and how did they create those electrifying, 
earthquake-heavy beats? This is their 
unforgettable story. 

A Tale Of Three Drummers 

T he musical side of Motown's 
meteoric success story didn't start 
out with a flurry of hits and 
sequined-clad stars. Its humble origin was 
sometime in the summer of 1958 on the 
East Side of Detroit, in the living room of 
Claudette Rogers (soon to be Robinson, 
and a future Miracle). Aspiring record 
mogul Berry Gordy needed musicians to 
rehearse with some acts he was grooming 
for his new record company. Years of 
hanging around Detroit's jazz and blues 
clubs had brought him into contact with 
the best musicians the city had to offer. 

Keyboardist Joe Hunter, a road-savvy 
veteran from Hank Ballard & The 
Midnighters, was Gordy's starting point 
as well as his first studio bandleader. The 
bass chair was temporarily filled by local 


schoolteacher Tweed Beard and club 
bassists Clarence Isabell and Joe 
Williams, and the guitar duties were han¬ 
dled by Larry Veeder until Eddie Willis 
took over in late '59. The early recruit 
whose impact was the most profound, 
however, was drummer William 
’’Benny” Benjamin, a native of Biloxi, 
Mississippi who had migrated to Detroit 
and had been tearing it up in clubs and 
showrooms around town for several years. 

Benny's impact was instant and 
emphatic. On the first three significant 
hits Gordy's fledgling record company 
was able to chart—Marv Johnson's 
"Come To Me" and Barrett Strong's 
"Money" (both 1959), and The Miracles' 
"Shop Around" (1960)—it was obvious 
that Benny's style was not a work in 
progress. He was already a fully devel¬ 
oped master. With a flurry of sidestick, 
Latin, and tom-driven grooves, deft brush 
work, and explosive fills, Benny staked 
his claim in those three songs as a formi¬ 
dable colorist and innovator. 

"Because he had been playing with all 
these big bands around town, Benny 
brought a lot of tools with him when he 
came to Motown," explains guitarist 
Eddie Willis. "He'd come into a session 
sometimes and he'd be showin' off play¬ 
ing all that big band shit on a simple 
Marvelettes tune or some other kind of 
easy material—like, Brap! Bah boo dee 
ah, bop wee op, bam! We'd say, 'Sit the 
hell down, fool, and play the right stuff,' 
and he'd just laugh and play the tune the 
way he knew he was supposed to play it 
in the first place." 

Benny Benjamin also brought some 
other baggage with him besides the tools 
to which Eddie Willis was referring. He 
liked his alcohol, too much for his own 
good, a situation further complicated by 
the beginnings of heroin addiction. In late 
1961, as Benny's dependability began to 
come into question, Motown brought in a 
second drummer, Richard ’’Pistol” 
Allen. Allen was a hardcore jazz drummer 
who had been working with Kenny 
Burrell and Sonny Stitt. Possessing a 
wicked backbeat and a hard-swinging, 
authentic Beale Street shuffle he had 
picked up as a child in Memphis, Allen 
began to carve his own niche in Motown's 
ever-increasing recording schedule. After 
cutting Martha & The Vandellas' 1963 hit 


toGDEHN DftUMMEffi JULY IW 






"Heat Wave" and The Supremes' "Baby 
Love" in 1964, it became obvious to 
everyone in the studio that the experiment 
that began as a stopgap situation to cover 
for Benny's unpredictable behavior had 
instead produced a new, resonant voice in 
the Motown drum department. 

Uriel Jones, the final member and 
missing ingredient of Motown's drum 
trio, arrived in 1964 straight out of Marvin 
Gaye's road band. The most natural pock¬ 
et player of the three drummers, Jones had 
the same jazz background as Benny 
Benjamin and Pistol Allen, but his exten¬ 
sive road and club work were firmly 
grounded in rhythm & blues and pop 
music. You only needed to hear a few 
bars of the drum intro from The 
Temptations' "Ain't Too Proud To Beg" 
to know that this was a drummer accus¬ 
tomed to throwin' down and makin' peo¬ 
ple dance. 

"The three of them gave us a lot to 
work with because of their different 
feels," explains Paul Riser, one of 
Motown's premier arrangers. "Benny 
Benjamin had the tightest and most solid 
beat of the three drummers. He had a New 
Orleans kind of feel, and it was amazing 
how he could make a two- or three-piece 
drumset sound like fifteen pieces. Pistol, 
on the other hand, because of his jazz 
background, had a little looser beat, but he 
had the strongest backbeat and the heavi¬ 
est hi-hat of the three guys. Uriel's drum 
sound was the most open and the most 
relaxed and laid back. He had kind of a 
mixed feel. He did a lot of things well." 

The arrangers weren't the only ones 
who had a lot to work with. The other 
musicians surrounding the drummers 
weren't exactly chopped liver. From 1959 
through 1963, Berry Gordy and his A&R 
team had been methodically recruiting the 
remaining pieces of what they hoped 
would be a serviceable studio lineup that 
could provide some magic and drive the 
company's novice vocal stars up the 
charts. Together with the drummers, they 
become known as "The Funk Brothers," a 
crack outfit of local jazz, blues, and R&B 
musicians that included keyboardists 
Johnny Griffith and Earl Van Dyke, gui¬ 
tarists Robert White, Joe Messina, and the 
aforementioned Eddie Willis, percussion¬ 
ists Jack Ashford, Eddie "Bongo" Brown, 
and Jack Brokensha, and a tormented 


genius of a bass player named James 
Jamerson, whose thunderous bass lines 
caused a major seismic event with every 
record he cut. 

From 1961 through 1972, the home of 
The Funk Brothers was "Studio A," a tiny 
basement recording facility in Motown's 
Hitsville U.S.A. complex on Detroit's 
West Grand Boulevard. The musicians 
affectionately dubbed it "The Snakepit." 
During the glory years of Motown 
(1963-68), Benny, Uriel, Pistol, and their 
partners in crime napalmed the studio 
walls with incendiary grooves on a daily 
basis. The end result was a staggering out¬ 
pouring of Number-1 hits: "Reach Out, 
I'll Be There," "My Girl," "You Keep Me 


Hanging On," "Uptight (Everything's 
Alright)," "I Heard It Through The 
Grapevine," "Shotgun," "Ain't Nothing 
Like The Real Thing," "My Guy," "It's 
The Same Old Song," and dozens of oth¬ 
ers. The Temptations, The Supremes, 
Marvin Gaye, The Four Tops, Smokey 
Robinson, Stevie Wonder, and all the rest 
of Berry Gordy's stable of stars may have 
been on a tear, but they all had one thing 
in common: Their rocket fuel was The 
Funk Brothers. Benny Benjamin, never 
one to take crap from anyone, was always 
the one to remind the vocalists of that fact 
of life whenever they forgot it. Many a 
cocky, young Motown star had been on 
the receiving end of Benny's patented "I 


MODERN DRUMMER JULY 1999 













“The MotOWII beat that Uriel Jones, Benny Benjamin, 
and Pistol Allen delivered was an irresistible, 8th-note, 
hi hat-driven grOOVG punctuated with a sledgehammer back- 
beat. The dance floors of the world didn’t Stand a chance.” 


been here before you, and I'll still 
be here once you're gone" speech. 

Feeling he was paying his dues, 
Benny demanded respect and 
received it. The working conditions 
at Hitsville were extreme. Everyone 
was on call twenty-four hours a 
day. An average work week was 
five to six days with two to three 
(three-hour) sessions per day, dur¬ 
ing which finished rhythm tracks 
were expected to be cranked out 
every forty-five minutes to an hour. 

"There was hell to pay if a producer 
took more than an hour with us on 
a tune," recalls Uriel Jones, "but 
most of the time, we had no prob¬ 
lem deliverin'." 

The Motown beat that Uriel, 
Benny, and Pistol delivered was an 
irresistible, 8th-note, hi-hat-driven 
groove punctuated with a sledge¬ 
hammer backbeat. The dance floors 
of the world didn't stand a chance. 
Neither did musicians who admired 
the sound. Upon a chance meeting 
with Motown's entourage during a 
European Motown Revue, John 
Lennon remarked, "What the hell is 
that drummer hitting the snare 
drum with, a bloody tree stump?" 

The Funk Brothers eventually 
became so important to the every¬ 
day recording events at Hitsville 
that producers rescheduled the session if a 
pivotal bandmember wasn't available. 
"That's one of the reasons we didn't do 
too much live work with Motown," 
recalled bandleader Earl Van Dyke short¬ 
ly before his passing in 1992. "If we went 
on the road, they couldn't make records. 
Most of the guys still did some limited 
road work—like when Robert White, 
myself, and Jack Ashford did the 1965 
European Motown Revue. But even then 
they wouldn't let Jamerson and Benny 
come with us. They needed them back 
home to cut. And besides, with all those 
pubs in England, they knew those two 
guys would never come back!" 

As the end of the decade approached, 
Benny's private demons finally caught up 
with him. Disappearing for long periods 
of time, he was rarely in any kind of shape 
to play when he did show up. In 1968, his 
drumsticks were finally stilled as the rav¬ 
ages of his heroin addiction ended his life. 


The Funk Brothers' mourning period was 
short out of necessity. Berry Gordy 
bought out cross-town rival Ed Wingat's 
Golden World Studios and renamed it 
"Studio B." There was more recording 
work than ever, and Uriel and Pistol now 
had to cover for Benny on a permanent 
basis. 

At the same time, Motown's meteoric 
rise began to cause fractures around the 
foundation. Internal bickering plagued 
The Supremes and Temptations, and 
Holland-Dozier-Holland, Berry Gordy's 
bread-and-butter songwriting team, left 
the company in an avalanche of lawsuits. 
Clashing egos ruled the day, and even the 
musicians joined the fray as they began to 
voice their disenchantment with the lack 
of album credits (which they eventually 
got in the early 70s). 

On the positive side, Norman 
Whitfield's psychedelic sound revolution 
was in full swing with Temptation hits 


like "Cloud Nine" and "I Can't Get Next 
To You," and Marvin Gaye was redefin¬ 
ing the parameters of rhythm & blues with 
his masterpiece, What's Going On. But 
the lure of California weighed strongly on 
Berry Gordy's psyche. In 1972, Motown 
moved to Los Angeles, effectively shut¬ 
ting down the production line of the most 
prolific hit-making band in the history of 
recorded music. 

An Interview With Pistol Allen 

by Zoro 

otown was always feel-good 
music. From pop-inspired cla- 
sics like The Supremes' "You 
Can't Hurry Love" and Mary Wells' "My 
Guy" to the neck-bone-connected-to-the- 
leg-bone, extra-stupid, funky grooves of 
Edwin Starr's "Twenty Five Miles" or Jr. 
Walker's "Home Cookin'," Motown 
music has always had the power to give 



MODERN DRUMMER JULY 1999 











listeners that warm happy feeling. In the 
late '60s, growing up in an area of South 
Central Los Angeles known as Compton, 
those records were always staples in my 
home. Even though I had no idea who the 
drummers on those records were, they 
became the reason why I took up the 
drums. 

You can imagine what was going on in 
my head when, thirty years later, by a coin¬ 
cidence of fate, I had the opportunity to 
meet and play for one of these childhood 
heroes of mine. Shortly after miraculously 
coming across Richard "Pistol" Allen's 
phone number, I realized that I was sched¬ 
uled to play in Detroit with Frankie Valli. I 
called Pistol to introduce myself and let 
him know I would be playing in town. 
After I extended an invitation to have him 
come to the show so we could meet, Pistol 
agreed and showed up around 3:00 P.M. for 
my soundcheck. He was a very genuine 
man with an extremely lovable disposition. 
It was like I had known him all my life, 
which in a sense I had. We hit it off right 
away and just began talking up a storm. 

I was anxious to get him on my drums to 
watch the magic I had waited a lifetime to 
see in person. I wasn't about to let him 
escape from my presence without having 
him throw down a little on my kit—at least 
not while I had the ability to persuade him. 
Fortunately, it didn't take any coercing at 
all. He was ready, willing, and able. The 
guys in the band were on their way to 
catering to get some grub, but they all 
stopped dead in their tracks when Pistol 
broke out with the beat from "Heat Wave" 
by Martha & The Vandellas. "That's not 
'Z'," they thought, and then they turned 
around and saw this little old cat wailing. 
They stood there dumbfounded. Man, he 
had such a feel! And they could tell what 
the song was just by his drum fill! 

He continued to play other great classic 
beats that he had invented: The Supremes' 
"Baby Love," "I Can't Help Myself (Sugar 
Pie Honey Bunch)" by The Four Tops, and 
the shuffle from Marvin Gaye's "How 
Sweet It Is (To Be Loved By You)." What 
a treat to see those beats come to life at the 
hands of their creator, more than thirty-five 
years after they were recorded. 

I didn't go down to catering. When I get 
that excited, it's impossible for me to eat. 
Besides, I didn't want to waste precious 
time, and I had oh so much to ask. 


■ 


'he Tracks Of Their Drums 


E veryone knows the drum sound of The 
Beatles was Ludwig. James Brown's 
drummers stoked the fires of their funk rev¬ 
olution with Vox, and the names Premier 
and Keith Moon have become synonymous. 
But Motown's casting call for the drumset 
that would be instantly identifiable with "The 
Sound Of Young America" wasn't quite so 
single-minded. Employing more of a 
"Rainbow Coalition" approach, Rogers. 
Ludwig, Gretsch, Slingerland, and half a 
dozen no-name, pawn-shop brands were all 
part of the Motown sound. 

During Hitsville's early years, the sight of 
Benny Benjamin or Pistol Allen dragging 
their own drumkits down the studio steps 
was a common one. But by late 1963, when 
Uriel Jones began shifting from the road to 
"Studio A," Motown had already purchased 
a permanent set for the studio. "They were 
good drums, but they were second-hand," 
says Uriel Jones. "They were also a mix of 
brands. Now, they also had another set of 
drums down there that they bought a few 
years later, but those drums were only used 
when we had a double drummer session. 
That second set was also just thrown 
together stuff. 

"See, with Benny," Jones continues, "you 
didn't want to have no big, expensive set of 
drums down in the studio because he would 
sneak in from time to time and pawn them. 
One time we were getting ready to cut a 
song and Bonny was late. Jack Brokensha 
[one of Motown's vibists] offered to play the 
drums until Benny got there, but when he 
went behind the baffle he said, 'Where's the 
drums?' Benny had come in the night 
before and convinced the night watchman 
that the set was his, and he pawned them." 

Because of Hitsville's constantly evolving 
studio technology, drum recording tech¬ 
niques down in "Studio A" were always an 
ongoing experiment. The principal catalyst 
was the change from Motown's early 2- and 
3-track period to the mid-'60s 8-track era, 
and finally, the advent of 16-track technolo¬ 
gy at the end of the decade. On early 
recording sessions, like for the tune 
"Heatwave," it was standard procedure fora 
percussionist to shako his tambourine into a 
microphone that was already being shared 
by the snare and hi-hat. 

Further complicating the situation was 
the fact that the drums also had to compete 
for attention with several other non-percus- 
sive instruments that were being simultane¬ 


ously recorded on the same channel. 
Crosstalk and bleed were staples of the 
early sound. The studio's antiquated 
Western Electric mixing console only had 
three tracks (and only two prior to 1961) to 
accommodate guitars, bass, drums, percus¬ 
sion, keyboards, vocals, and on occasion, 
horns and/or strings. However, as the avail¬ 
able tracks increased in the mid-'60s, the 
control over the drum sound was drastically 
improved because they could now be isolat¬ 
ed. 

To Benny, Pistol, and Uriel, those 
changes meant very little. All this talk of 
channels and tracks was the realm of the 
room on the other side of the control booth 
glass. They were more interested in what 
was happening in the corner of the studio 
floor where their kit was set up. "We experi¬ 
mented all kinds of ways," explains Pistol 
Allen. "We played with the front bass drum 
head off with some blankets stuffed in it. 
They;d stick the mic' right in there. For the 
snare, we'd place the microphone right on 
the head or sometimes on the side near the 
air hole. For the floor tom, I'd tune it to a 
"G," and then they'd mike it from under¬ 
neath with a boom stand. 

"To get the right sound out of the snare 
drum," Allen says, "we put electrical tape on 
the snares on the bottom head. We'd cut 
two little strips of tape and put one on each 
side of the strainer to keep the snares as 
close to the head as possible—you know, 
to get that tight, crisp sound." 

Uriel also recalls duct-taping a pad of 
Kleenex to the top snare head, and he also 
has a different spin on Pistol's comments 
about tuning. "Those drums very rarely 
went out of tune," Uriel says, "and besides, 
the engineers didn't want us messing 
around with the tuning anyway. Once in a 
while if it got really out, you might pull out a 
drumkey and give a half turn or so. But we 
usually came in and just started playing 
with what was already there." 

Both Allen and Jones, however, are in 
total agreement when it comes to the sub¬ 
ject of drumheads. "We didn't care what 
kind of drumhead we used on the set, and 
we hardly ever changed or broke them 
because we didn't play that hard," Pistol 
points out. "It didn't matter to us what they 
were. They had tomato catsup stains on 
'em and McDonald's french fry grease was 
splattered everywhere. As long as they 
sounded good, that's all we cared about." • 


MODERN DRUMMER JULT IW 









http://www.drumsupply.com 


Eventually, after Pistol showed me many 
of the Motown drumming secrets, we were 
kicked off the stage by production people, 
so we went back to my hotel room to hang 
out. It didn't surprise me that my room 
became the prime hang spot of the evening, 
because everyone wanted to drop by and 
rub shoulders with this musical giant. 
Pistol came complete with a photo album 
of memoirs he was more than eager to 
share. His personal history was obviously a 
life richly blessed with great musical expe¬ 
riences. It was awesome! 

Finally, it was show time—time to walk 
across the street to the gig. I was so 


entranced by our meeting that it hadn't yet 
occurred to me that I would be playing in 
front of a cat who had influenced me 
throughout most of my playing career— 
and now he's at my gig! Gee, how did this 
happen? Even with Pistol looking over my 
shoulder and the self-imposed pressure I 
was feeling, the concert flowed smooth as 
silk and I felt I had played my best. 

It's amazing when I think how I've 
played in front of huge crowds for years 
without ever getting nervous, and yet one 
special person watching made me more 
self-conscious than all the past audiences 
put together. When it was over, Pistol came 


Benny Benjamin Grooves 

1) "Money (That's What I Want)"—Barrett Strong, 1959 

2) "Shop Around"—The Miracles, 1960 

3) "Please Mr. Postman"—The Marvelettes, 1961 

4) "Do You Love Me"—The Contours, 1962 

5) "Mickey's Monkey"—The Miracles, 1963 

6) "Too Many Fish In The Sea"—The Marvelettes, 1964 

7) "My Guy"—Mary Wells, 1964 

8) "Dancing In The Street"—Martha & The Vandellas, 1964 

9) "Baby I Need Your Loving"—The Four Tops, 1964 

10) "Ooh Baby Baby"—The Miracles, 1965 

11) "My Girl"—The Temptations, 1965 

12) "Shotgun"—Jr. Walker & The All Stars, 1965 

13) "Get Ready"—The Temptations, 1966 

14) "You Can't Hurry Love"—The Supremes, 1966 

Pistol Allen Grooves 

15) (Love Is Like A) HeatWave"—Martha & The Vandellas, 1963 

16) 'Baby Love"—The Supremes, 1964 

17) "The Way You Do The Things You Do"—The Temptations, 1964 

18) "I Can't Help Myself (Sugar Pie Honey Bunch)"—The Four Tops, 1965 

19) "It's The Same Old Song'—The Four Tops, 1965 

20) "How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved By You)"—Marvin Gaye, 1965 

21) "Reach Out I'll Be There"—The FourTops, 1966 

22) "Uptight (Everything's Alright)"—Stevie Wonder, 1966 

23) "Jimmy Mack"—Martha & The Vandellas, 1967 

24) "Bernadette"—The FourTops, 1967 

25) "What Does It Take (To Win Your Love)"—Jr. Walker & The All Stars, 1969 

Uriel Jones Grooves 

26) "Ain't That Peculiar"—Marvin Gaye, 1965 

27) "The Tracks Of My Tears"—The Miracles, 1965 

28) 'Ain't Too Proud To Beg"—The Temptations, 1966 

29) "(I Know) I'm Losing You"—The Temptations, 1966 

30) 'What Becomes Of The Brokenhearted"—Jimmy Ruffin, 1966 

31) "Ain't No Mountain High Enough"—Marvin Gaye & Tammi Terrell, 1967 

32) "I Second That Emotion"—The Miracles. 1967 

33) "I Heard It Through The Grapevine"—Marvin Gaye, 1968 

34) "For Once In My Life"—Stevie Wonder, 1968 

35) "Cloud Nine"—The Temptations, 1968 

36) "The Tears Of A Clown"—The Miracles, 1970 

Multiple DrummerGrooves 

37) "Going To A Go-Go"—The Miracles, 1966 (Benny Benjamin and Uriel Jones) 

38) "Cloud Nine"—The Temptations, 1968 (Uriel Jones and Spider Webb) 

39) "I Heard It Through The Grapevine"—Marvin Gaye, 1968 (Benny Benjamin, Pistol 
Allen, and Uriel Jones) 

40) -War"—Edwin Starr, 1970 (Uriel Jones & Pistol Allen) 

(Note: Song dates are based on the year of their release. A few of the above songs were 
recorded the previous year from the listed release date.) _ 


MODERN 1 DRUMMER JULY 1999 
















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399 Avedis Ziidiian Comoanv 




up to me with a gleam in his eye and said, 
"Hey man, you got this real funky groove 
that made me want to dance all night. I 
really dig the way you play." Well, for 
someone who prides himself on being a 
groove drummer, that was the compliment 
of a lifetime. 

After the show, we continued our hang- 
a-thon back at my room. For this segment 
of our time together, I pulled out my 
Hitsville USA: The Motown Singles 
Collection 1959-1971 four-CD box set and 
dissected each song with him, verse by 
verse, chorus by chorus, and sometimes 
even measure by measure. I felt like an 
archaeologist digging into the earth and 
uncovering spellbinding mysteries of some 
great ancient culture. I just knew I had to 
share what I learned with the rest of the 
drumming world. The following interview 
features the highlights from the many 
hours of conversations I had with Pistol on 
this unique and magical day. 

Z: How old were you when you first start¬ 
ed playing the drums and how did you get 
started? 

PA: I guess I was about eight or nine years 
old. I went to a pawn shop on Beale Street 
in Memphis and bought a snare drum, 
snare stand, and a hi-hat. I was so poor, if I 
wanted to play a full set I had to use the 
school drumset. I used to go down and 
watch people like Rufus Thomas, Little 
Otis, Esther Phillips, Billy Eckstine, and 
Lionel Hampton at the Hippodrome. And 
Cab Calloway—I'll never forget those zoot 
suits. All those people had an influence on 
me. But then there was this dancer in the 


Lena Home show named Bill Robinson. 
He had so much finesse. That's what I real¬ 
ly wanted to do—be a dancer. 

Z: Tell me about your gospel roots. 

PA: I grew up stopping by the church, just 
dying to go in there to listen to the music. 
That's where I got the sanctified beat I 
played on "Higher And Higher" by Jackie 
Wilson, from the sanctified church in 
Memphis. It's a special kind of way you 
got to play to get that sound. It's got noth¬ 
ing to do with Motown. It's a gospel thing 
from Beale St. It's more of a tambourine, 
sanctified kind of thing. 

Z: Did you play a lot of shuffles growing 
up? 


PA: Oh yeah, and that became my bread 
and butter. People hired me for that groove, 
and it wasn't just Motown. In fact, I played 
Wilson Pickett's first shuffle. I don't 
remember the name of the song, but it was 
a hit. That's when he was in Detroit. 

Z: Speaking of Detroit, how did you first 
get involved in the whole Motown scene? 
PA: Benny Benjamin was drunk on a ses¬ 
sion, so they asked me to come down there 
and fill his spot. I hate to say that, but 
Benny drank a lot. He drank himself 'til he 
died. But couldn't nobody fill Benny's 
shoes exactly. 

Z: How was Benny an influence on you 
with regards to developing the Motown 


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sound and beat? 

PA: I went down to Motown, and Benny, 
who we used to call "Papa Zita," said, 
"Look, this is how we doin' this. Jazz is 
not gonna fit on it. They want it straight 
with 8th notes and a big backbeat. You 
dig?" 

Z: They wanted it more funk than jazz? 

PA: Well, that's what we call funk now, 
but it was just 8th notes with a big fat 
backbeat. Like a baseball bat and a stomp¬ 
ing foot—boom boom bam, boom boom 
bam. 

Z: Did you know Uriel Jones before you 
came to Motown? 

PA: Oh yeah. Uriel was playing with dif¬ 
ferent bands around town. We all did. I 
was playing clubs like the West End with 
Kenny Burrell and Pepper Adams. 
Everybody knew each other, long before 
Motown. 

Z: Do you remember your first hit record? 
PA: "Baby Love" by The Supremes. It was 
a shuffle with a two beat. That's all I 
played. You woulda killed the tune with 
anything more. 

Z: You guys had a certain way of working 
in the studio—different formulas that you 
applied to the music. I'd like to understand 
how things were put together in those ses¬ 
sions, so I want to play you a few Motown 
tunes and have you talk about what's hap¬ 
pening and who was playing what. [We lis¬ 
ten to "Your Precious Love" by Marvin 
Gaye and Tammi Terrell] 

PA: You know what sold this tune? The 
bass! Hear that bass line? Jamerson ain't 
all over the damn place. Listen to what 
he's playing. Most bass players would 


stick to the bottom on a tune like this, but 
Jamerson's playing a melody. Now you 
hear that hi-pitched shank on the backbeat 
on 2 and 4? That's Eddie Willis on the gui¬ 
tar. Joe Messina is doubling Jamerson's 
bass line on his guitar, and Robert White is 
playing a different rhythm with his guitar 
chords. 

Everybody is playing something differ¬ 
ent. Simple stuff. It was the little stupid 
stuff we was doing. But see, nobody can 
make that now. We knew exactly what to 
do to get the sound. With today's musi¬ 
cians, everybody wants to be a star. 
Nobody just wants to play their parts like 
we did at Motown. If there was something 
magical that made that music sound good, 
it was the fact that everybody played a 
part. Wasn't nobody trying to be stars 
down there. We was just making music. 

Z: [Plays a tape with the next three songs.] 
Who came up with the famous 4/4 Motown 
beat on Four Tops songs like "I Can't Help 
Myself (Sugar Pie, Honey Bunch)," 
"Standing In The Shadows Of Love," and 
"It's The Same Old Song"? [The 4/4 beat 
that Pistol describes is 8th notes on the hi- 
hat, quarter notes on the snare on every 
beat, and a bass drum that follows the bass 
line.] 

PA: In the studio, Uriel and Benny played 
that 4/4 beat at times, but couldn't nobody 
do it like me. It was my specialty, so I 
played most of those sessions. Now I'm 
gonna explain something to you: You play 
the 8th notes on that cymbal [pounds out 
some 8th notes on the desk] and then hum 
your train while you're playing them. 
[Sings "choo choo choo choo choo choo 


choo choo."] Then you play the four on 
top of that on the snare. Now my foot is 
playing the same kind of thing that 
Jamerson played on the bass. [He sings the 
bass lines from the above songs and then 
sings the bass drum part.] When you hear 
Motown songs like Stevie Wonder's 
"Uptight" and The Four Tops songs you 
just played for me, you gonna hear that 
same kind of foot line. You understand? 

Z: Another of the 4/4 beats is The Four 
Tops' "Bernadette," but that 4/4 groove is 
a little different from the last three we 
talked about. What are you doing different¬ 
ly on that song? 

PA: I'm swinging a cymbal pattern: tang 
tang ka, tang tang ka [8th notes and then 
two swung 16ths] and I'm playing a 4/4 
with my left hand, you understand? Just 
like you'd swing the tune "How High The 
Moon." With Jamerson and everybody else 
playing, it's just gonna fall right in the 
pocket. 

Z: What about the "Grapevine" beat? 
[We're listening to Marvin Gaye's version 
of "IHeard It Through The Grapevine."] 
PA: They still don't know how we did 
that. That beat was created by me, Uriel, 
and Benny. It's a matter of feel—the com¬ 
bination of guys involved in that beat. Lots 
of drummers can play "Grapevine," but 
they don't get that authentic sound the way 
it was done. Nobody plays like me, Uriel, 
or Benny. They knew up at Motown that if 
they used Pistol here for this feeling, 
Benny here for that feeling, and Uriel for 
another kind of feel, there'd be a lot of 
good-feeling music. 

Now I'm gonna tell you how we came 


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The Way They Filled 
The Songs They Fillec 


Wanna delve into some mysteries that have 
more twists and turns than a John Grisham 
novel? Try deciphering which drummer (or 
drummers) is playing on a specific Motown 
record. History is somewhat of a help. If the 
record was cut in the first two or three years 
of the company's existence (1959-61), 
there's a 98% chance that it's Benny 
Benjamin. But from the next two years on, 
the waters get murky as Pistol Allen and 
Uriel Jones get added to the mix. 

The memory banks of Pistol and Uriel can 
only take you so far, because they cut thou¬ 
sands of sessions at Hitsville. Sometimes 
each was the sole drummer. Other times 
their call might have been to play overdubs 
or live fills behind the main timekeeper. A 
twenty-two-year-old couldn't keep track of all 
that information even if it happened last 
year, so don't expect two men in their mid¬ 
sixties to remember events four decades 
ago. 

But don't despair. All is not lost. A good 
percentage of Uriel and Pistol's recollections 
are dead-on and supported by the memories 
of the other Funk Brothers, producers, 
arrangers, and even the union contracts. But 
we're still left with a sizable gray area. 

That's when we rely on Pistol Allen's 
patented "Drum Fill Identification Method." 
"To identify the Motown drummers on those 
records," Pistol offers, "you gotta listen to the 
fills. Each of us played a different type of fill 
at the end of every four or eight bars. If you 
hear da-da-da-da-da-da- [four 16th and 
two 8th notes], you know it's Benny. Then 
Uriel and I each had our own kind of fills. 
[Pistol sings each of these. See the three 
examples.] See, Benny couldn't play like 


me, I couldn't play like Benny, and I can't 
play like Uriel. Each of us played our own 
thing." 

It's not a foolproof method, because if it 
was a double drummer session and one guy 
was playing time while the other played the 
fills, you're still left with the mystery of who 
was playing the time. And then there are 
those troubling records on which a producer 
might have asked Uriel or Pistol to do a 
Benny Benjamin type fill...hey, we're musi¬ 
cians, not IRS tax auditors. Just learn the 
licks, impress your friends, and enrich your 
bag of R&B tricks with three of the baddest 
fills to ever grace a round piece of acetate 
with a hole in the middle. 

Benny Benjamin Fill 


■ ft - m d.dd 







Uriel Jones Fill 


Pistol Allen Fill 




up with that beat. I played an Indian war 
dance on the tom-tom. [He sings the Indian 
war dance groove.] Benny played the foot, 
and Uriel played the backbeats on the 
snare. "Heard It Through The Grapevine" 
was three drummers! 

Z: How about "HeatWave"? 

PA: One of the secrets to getting that 
sound was to put the tambourine on the hi- 
hat, 'cause you're gonna play 2 and 4 on 
the hi-hat anyway with your foot. You 
know that little metal rod that sticks up 
through your hi-hat? Well, that's where I 
stuck it. Put your tambourine on the hi-hat 
and try it out. 

Z: Who played on The Temptations' "The 
Way You Do The Things You Do"? 

PA: That was me playing the shuffle on 
the drums, Eddie Willis played guitar, 
James Jamerson was on bass, and Earl Van 
Dyke was on piano. 

Z: You go way back with Stevie Wonder, 
don't you? Even before he came to 
Motown, you already knew him. 

PA: I met Stevie when his name was still 
Steveland Morris. I used to go help out the 
youngsters at their school for the blind 
when Stevie was just a kid. Some of us 
guys would go down there to inspire them. 
I became Stevie's first drum teacher and 
gave him his first drum pedal. I still have 
his first harmonica. Then in later years, I 
played some live work with him on the 
road from time to time. 

Z: It must have been a great feeling to see 
how far he came and that you had some¬ 
thing to do with it. What was it like when 
you played live with him? 

PA: It was pure magic. Sometimes we 


would trade drum solos. I'd play a solo, 
then Stevie would play, but he was the star 
so the crowd would go crazy when he 
played. See, I was just the background 


drummer, but when Stevie cut loose, girls 
would start throwing off hats, clothes— 
even their drawers. It was wild! Don't for¬ 
get, Stevie played drums on some Motown 



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records too. He was like an octopus, and 
man could that brother groove. He played 
drums on most of his own hits in the 70s. 
Z: When you and the rest of the drummers 
worked on Norman Whitfield sessions, 
particularly during his psychedelic soul 
era, it was a much different experience 
from when you worked with Holland- 
Dozier-Holland, Smokey, or any of the 
other producers. What was so special about 
what Whitfield was doing? 

PA: Norman's material was always so dif¬ 
ferent. He loved to surprise you with dif¬ 
ferent accents and syncopated rhythms. 
He'd get a tune and spend two days on it. 
But it would end up being a hit, so he real¬ 
ly didn't care how long it would take. And 
he also liked to use several drums and 
sometimes overdub more drum parts on 
top. "Cloud Nine," "Ball Of Confusion," 
"Twenty-five Miles" by Edwin Starr—all 
those things involved several drummers or 
overdubs or both. Like on "Twenty-five 
Miles," we cut that together at Golden 
World Studios with Uriel and me on drums 
and Jack Ashford on tambourine. There 
was so much cymbal work that we had to 
use two drummers, and they still had to 
overdub some stuff. 

Z: I learned all those psychedelic-oriented 
Motown songs thinking it was one drum¬ 
mer! 

PA: [laughs] No way in the world could 
one drummer play all that stuff. 

Z: What was it like when two or three of 
you would play together? 

PA: Each of us would play a distinctly dif¬ 
ferent pattern. We wouldn't all play the 
same beat together. It was all about parts. I 


might just be groovin', playing the beat, 
and someone else would do the pickups. Or 
we might divide up where someone would 
be playing just backbeats and the other 
guys would be playing hi-hat and kick 
drum. 

Z: Did you or Benny or Uriel ever use 
click tracks back in the day? 

PA: We was the click track, [laughs] Later 
on we played with one, but it bugged the 
shit out of us. We couldn't get the groove. 
We said, "Aah, that's too mechanical. We 
want this [starts dancing and singing a 
funky groove]. You can't get that out of no 
click track. 

Z: Players from that era had a lighter touch 
than most drummers do today. How hard 
were all of you playing in the studio? It 
sounds like you were groovin' hard but 
playing light, just like the jazz cats you 
were listening to. 

PA: Absolutely right. I wish more young 
cats would understand that. Very few have 
a handle on that concept. There's no musi- 
cality in just playing hard all the time. 
There's nothing to draw you in and make 
you listen. 

Z: We've spent a lot of time talking about 
what you did at Motown, but you were 
very prolific outside of Hitsville. Tell me 
about some of these non-Motown dates. 

PA: We did a lot of work for Holland- 
Dozier-Holland when they left Motown 
and started their own record labels, Hot 
Wax and Invictus. I played on "Band Of 
Gold" by Freda Payne, who was one of 
their artists. I also did a lot of sessions for 
Brunswick Records out of Chicago, like 
Jackie Wilson's "Higher And Higher," and 


I did John Lee Hooker's "Boom Boom 
Boom" in Chicago. That was me, Eddie 
Willis, and Jamerson. Stax Records also 
came in and did some things with us. They 
would send different producers to us for 
their sessions. 

Z: Did the magnitude of what you were 
doing both at Motown and for other record 
companies ever hit you when you realized 
you were playing on all these Huge 
records? 

PA: No, I never did think about it because 
at the time I was just trying to make more 
money to take care of my family. That was 
the main issue. 

Z: What would you consider your greatest 
reward for all the wonderful work you've 
accomplished? 

PA: It ain't about money. I'm already 
blessed. I'm happy, I got ten beautiful kids, 
and I can go home down in the basement 
and play my drums or go play jazz in a 
club. I'm free. I'm already rich. 

An interview With Uriel Jones 

by Allan 'Dr. Licks" Slutsky 

ometimes the music lesson of your 
life occurs when you least expect 
it. Mine came in 1992 during a 
funeral service on a muggy September 
afternoon in Detroit. At the time, I'd 
known Uriel Jones for six years, a period 
during which I had interviewed him count¬ 
less times—nagging, probing, always try¬ 
ing to reawaken his old memories of past 
studio glories. Every encounter was filled 
with Uriel's down-home warmth, humor, 
endless patience, and that devilish laugh 




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that lets you know there's a teenage kid 
lurking just below the surface of that sixty¬ 
something body. 

But none of those character traits were in 
evidence this particular afternoon. Lying in 
a casket ten feet away from where Uriel and 
his drumset were positioned was his best 
friend. The great Earl Van Dyke, Motown's 
bandleader and keyboardist, had suc¬ 
cumbed to cancer a few days earlier, and 
the only feeling that Uriel could muster this 
afternoon was profound grief. He had gra¬ 
ciously consented to let me play guitar in 
the band that provided the music for the 


funeral, and I was awe-struck. Scattered 
throughout the cathedral were dozens of 
luminaries from the Motown story. Stevie 
Wonder sat in a pew an arm's length away 
from where I was set up, and Martha 
Reeves and Kim Weston were seated just 
across the aisle. Front-office people, studio 
technicians, and just about every musician 
who had ever played a note on a Motown 
record had all come by to pay their respects. 

As Uriel counted off the intro to "There 
Will Never Be Another You," it became 
immediately apparent that his sorrow 
hadn't affected his groove. Even the count¬ 


off was swingin'. In the next three minutes, 
every self-doubt, every musical deficiency, 
and every rhythmic question I ever had was 
answered. It didn't matter if you pushed 
the beat, laid back on it, played it straight 
up the middle, or did a combination of all 
three. Wherever you turned, there was 
Uriel with a beat that was as tight and unre¬ 
lenting as a vice grip, as gentle and relaxed 
as a spring shower, and as inspiring and 
uplifting as a speech by Nelson Mandela. 
There was nothing left to do except jump 
on and enjoy the ride. 

The following interview was comprised 
from conversations with Uriel that began in 
1987—and are still ongoing. 

AS: Unlike the more direct routes of 
Benny and Pistol, your path to Motown 
had a lot of twists and turns, didn't it? 

UJ: That's right. Those guys came in and 
started recording right away. I started in 
1962, but I was just playing in the live 
shows for the first few years. Maurice King 
[Motown's director of artist development] 
had seen me playing in the bars around 
town and recommended me to Marvin 
Gaye to play drums in his band. 

AS: Was it tough working for Marvin since 
he was also a drummer? 

UJ: Not really. He had played on a few of 
the early sessions and on a couple of his 
own tunes like "Hitch Hike" and "Stubborn 
Kinda Fellow," but he didn't really have a 
big attitude or nothin' like that. He was 
cool that way. He never told me how to 
play. But Marvin thought he was a better 
drummer than he really was. If it sounded 
sloppy, it was Marvin, [laughs] 

AS: What got you over the hump of being 
just a live, road-show drummer and into 
the inner circle at Hitsville? 

UJ: Besides playing with Marvin those 
first few years, I also did an early road tour 
with Stevie Wonder, The Supremes, and 
The Temptations. That was probably late 
'62 or early '63. Stevie was the only one of 
the three acts with a hit at the time. The 
Temps and The Supremes were still waitin' 
for their first hit. I think I played on a few 
of their early recordings that didn't make 
it. Those were the $5 sessions of the early 
years. But it was the first European 
Motown Revue later on in 1963 that really 
got my foot in the door. Earl Van Dyke had 
become the bandleader down in the studio, 
and when that tour was ready to kick off, 
he said to me, "Man, why don't you stop 


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starvin' with Marvin and go 'round the 
worl' with Earl?" Next thing you know, I 
was on my way to England with Kim 
Weston and the rest of the Motown stars. 
After that, I got really busy in the studio. 
AS: So it's 1964, you're thirty years old, 
and you've just become part of the most 
happening record label in America. You 
must have felt like you were on top of the 
world. 

UJ: Yeah, but it took me fifteen years and 
two different instruments to get there. I 
hadn't started out as a drummer. I was 
originally playing trombone, but I was also 
training to be a boxer and it was always 
messing with my chops. My teacher said, 
"Well, are you gonna box or are you gonna 
play the trombone?" I still wanted to box 
so I quit the trombone and took up the 
drums. I was playing in my high school 
marching band, mostly playing just snare 
drum, but when I switched over to the 
stage band, I moved on to the full trapset. 
We would play foxtrots, easy big band, 
Glenn Miller type stuff. That's where I 
learned to read. But when I graduated, I 
stopped playing for four or five years. 

AS: What got you back into it? 

UJ: I had gotten married and I was working 


in a Great Lakes steel plant. I bought some 
congas and bongos just to jam at some local 
clubs in Ecorse, Michigan, where I was liv¬ 
ing at the time. Then piece by piece, I started 
to buy some drums just to play for myself at 
home—just run-of-the-mill, pawn shop stuff. 
The bass drum was a cardboard Stroh's beer 
case, but it was the best-sounding bass drum 
I've ever heard to this day. But it wasn't loud 
enough to gig with, so around 1958 I bought 
myself a full set of Ludwigs so I could play 
the clubs. 

AS: You just started to play professionally in 
'58, and a mere four years later you're at 
Motown? You must have really woodshedded. 
UJ: Yeah, I moved up real fast. When I 
played my first professional gig in 1958, it 
was with a keyboardist named Joe Weaver. 
[Motown guitarist] Eddie Willis was also 
in that band. We were playing early rock 
'n' roll and doo-wop stuff in the clubs— 
songs like "Boney Maroney" and Little 
Richard kinds of things. But back at home, 
I was listening strictly to Coltrane, Miles, 
Blakey—anything that was jazz. I was 
teaching myself just by listening to the 
records, but sometimes I'd also pick up a 
few things from a local Detroit jazz drum¬ 
mer named Brut Marrick, who showed me 


some stuff. I had only been playing in the 
clubs for three or four years when Maurice 
King brought me to Marvin. 

AS: What were those early Marvin Gaye 
tours like? 

UJ: We played every town on Route 66— 
from Denver to California. We must have 
done something like sixty one-nighters at a 
shot. The band was twelve to fourteen 
pieces, and The Spinners were also part of 
the show, so we played for them too. We 
traveled around in a Scenicruiser bus with 
two different drivers so we didn't have to 
stop. There were so many concerts, I 
stopped practicing because there just 
wasn't any time. And besides, I was getting 
plenty of playing time on stage. 

AS: When you left Marvin for the studio in 
1964, it wasn't like they gradually eased 
you in. You cut an incredible number of 
hits those first few years, stuff like "I Hear 
A Symphony," "Don't Look Back," "My 
World Is Empty Without You," "Going To 
A Go-Go," "Ain't Too Proud To Beg," 
"Ask The Lonely," "Ain't That Peculiar," 
"The Tracks Of My Tears," and lots of 
other huge tracks. That's an incredible out¬ 
put of hits. They put a heavy load on your 
shoulders right from the beginning. 















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UJ: That was one of the reasons they 
brought me in. They already had Benny 
and Pistol, and there was still too much 
work. During that period the company was 
catching fire, and they were recording 
around the clock. There were all kinds of 
producers and songwriters climbing all 
over each other to cut with the Funk 
Brothers, 'cause they knew we'd give them 
a hit. Plus Benny, being a heroin addict and 
an alcoholic, wasn't too dependable, so I'd 
step in when he didn't show up. 

AS: Why did Motown put up with that sit¬ 
uation? 

UJ: Because Benny was the baddest drum¬ 
mer in Detroit. He invented the Motown 
groove. Me and Pistol learned it from him. 
He was the master. Plus which, it was hard 
to be angry at Benny because he was so 
funny. He was a lovable guy. Like he. 
might walk in an hour and a half late with 
Berry Gordy pacing the floor all pissed off, 
and he'd tell everyone he was driving on 
the highway and there was a circus truck 
that broke down and the elephants got 
loose and blocked the road. We knew that 
was bullshit because he didn't drive. 


Sometimes, he'd walk in the studio lookin' 
like he'd slept in a coal bin. He'd be carry¬ 
ing a snare drum with a busted head and 
his sticks would have no tips. He'd just 
turn the snare over, turn the sticks around, 
and say, "One, two, three! Let's go!" And 
he'd count it off and kick ass. 

I remember one time, he walked in with 
just a sock cymbal, a snare, one brush, and 
one stick. That's all he had to play with, 
and he cut a hit. Benny was bad! 

AS: Benny and Stevie Wonder had a very 
close relationship, didn't they? 

UJ: Yeah. Stevie always hung around the 
musicians. Earl used to teach him piano 
and organ, and Jamerson would show him 
a few things, but I think Benny was his 
favorite. Benny'd always be showin' him 
stuff on the drums, taking him over to his 
house to eat—they were real close. Stevie 
sounds just like Benny when he plays, 
except he don't do fills the same way. I 
think "Signed, Sealed, Delivered" is proba¬ 
bly Stevie, because Pistol would have usu¬ 
ally put in a few more fills and pickups, 
and the few fills that are there are different 
from what we would have played. 


AS: How did the producers choose which 
one of you guys would play a particular 
session? 

UJ: There were a few times where you 
might pick up a session just because you'd 
happen to be hanging around the studio. 
But most of the time, the producers were 
very specific as to who they wanted. If you 
weren't available, they'd cancel the session 
until you could make it. Most of the pro¬ 
ducers had different guys who were their 
favorites. Like Holland-Dozier-Holland 
liked to use Pistol. Valerie Simpson and 
Norman Whitfield liked to use me for 
almost all of their stuff. And everybody 
used Benny until his personal problems 
started dragging him down. 

When it came to shuffles, Pistol was the 
man. He had that Memphis thing going, so 
he did most of that work. But all three of us 
played shuffles and all three of us also 
played 4/4 beats [snare drum on every 
beat], although that was another style 
where Pistol probably did most of those 
sessions too. My thing and Benny's thing 
was funk, straight R&B, and things that 
were more rock 'n' roll. My particular spe- 


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Artist Model of Choice 


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John Riley 
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Dennis Chambers 
John “JR" Robinson 
Brian Blade 


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MODERN DRUMMER JULY 1W9 





cialty was new rhythms, like that experi¬ 
mental stuff Norman Whitfield was doing 
in the late '60s—songs like "Cloud Nine" 
and "Can't Get Next To You." 

AS: How specific were the dmm charts and 
the directions given to you by the producers? 
UJ: Some of them were very specific. 
Valerie Simpson was like that on all those 
Marvin Gaye/Tammi Terrell duets I played 
on, like "Ain't No Mountain High Enough" 
or "It Takes Two" [with Kim Weston]. 
Everything would be written out, but they 
didn't lock us into it note-for-note because 
they knew we created as we cut. Holland- 
Dozier-Holland and Norman Whitfield 
were a little looser. They'd walk around 
amongst the guys singing different ideas to 
us, but we had a lot of creative input on 
those sessions too. Then there were other 
guys like Clarence Paul or George Gordy, 
where we pretty much did whatever we 
wanted. 

AS: All three drummers at Motown had a 
unique situation in that you were playing 
with a virtuoso bassist like James 
Jamerson. What he was doing at the time 
was completely unheard of in that era. He 


was breaking new ground on almost every 
session. How did that affect what the 
drummers played? 

UJ: First of all, we never looked at it that 
way. It never even occurred to us at the 
time that he was as great as he was, 
because we were so used to him from play¬ 
ing in the clubs. To us, it was just a normal 
thing that he was so bad. But we had things 
we used to do with him. Like we'd shadow 
his bass parts with the kick drum as much 
as possible. Now, on one of his real busy 
parts like "Bernadette" or "I Was Made To 
Love Her," you'd just try to get the basic 
part or feel of the line, because he was 
playing way too many notes for the kick 
drum to keep up with. 

AS: Motown always publicized the family 
atmosphere in the company. That was true 
in the beginning and middle years, but in 
the latter part of the Detroit era, it all began 
to fall apart. Everyone was fighting, throw¬ 
ing out different group members, and suing 
each other. That didn't happen with The 
Funk Brothers. 

UJ: The Funk Brothers were always very 
close, and we're still friends to this day. 


We did a lot more than just play together in 
the studio. Our families were always get¬ 
ting together, we'd always be over at each 
others houses eatin', drinkin', and partying. 
Those were good years. Everybody had 
money, Cadillacs, boats, horses. We were 
very satisfied with the way our lives were 
going, and we appreciated each other. That 
helped us a lot down in the studio when 
things got busy. 

AS: You guys worked around the clock for 
many years, and it stayed that way almost 
until the end. Then all of a sudden in 1972, 
everything just stopped when Motown 
moved to the West Coast. What was the 
effect on you and Pistol and the rest of the 
musicians? 

UJ: We came to the studio and there was a 
sign that said the session for that day was 
going to be rescheduled—but it never was. 
For about a year, they would ship some 
tapes back for us to overdub parts on, but it 
trickled down to nothing. Some of the guys 
like Robert While, Earl Van Dyke, and 
Jamerson followed the company out to the 
West Coast, but it didn't really work out. 
The guys that stayed behind still had some 



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recording work around town from some of 
the other studios, and sometimes a few of 
us might play a tour for a Motown act. But 
basically, we just went back to doing what 
we always did: We played jazz in the clubs 
around town. That's what we do to this day. 

Someday They'll Be Together 

T he concept of the "house band" has 
gone the way of the Edsel, 8-track 
tapes, and mood rings. To most 
musicians—and music fans born after 
1970—it probably has no meaning at all. 
It's a term based on the novel idea that a 
small group of musicians could create a 
sound that would be instantly identifiable 
with a diverse roster of vocal artists and 
instrumentalists all working for the same 
record label. The house band became the 
lifeblood of the label, and, as much as some 
artists hated to admit it, the lifeblood of 
their very own careers. 

All of the great studio bands at Stax, 
Philly International, Brunswick, Chess, and 
Motown had one thing in common: They 
all started out with the same work ethic— 
the music came first. They ate it, slept it, 
and breathed it. Everything else—fame, 
money, fancy cars—was secondary. It may 
have been the most honest and genuine 
period of American pop music until, as all 
things usually do, the scene disintegrated 
amidst squabbles over money and lack of 
artistic recognition. 

Hitsville's "Studio A" is one of the few 
surviving relics of that era. The monitors 


and headphones have not been silent since 
the mid-'70s, and the room itself has 
become the main attraction at the Motown 
museum on Detroit's West Grand 
Boulevard. You can still feel Benny 
Benjamin's presence there, even though he 
has been gone now for three decades. But 
Pistol and Uriel are still alive and well, 
playing gigs around town, and occasionally 
even recording a session or two. 

To be fair, there were other drummers 
who played significant, but at the same 
time, limited roles in Motown's glorious 
history. Freddie Waits played on Stevie 
Wonder's "Fingertips—Pt. 2," and Chet 
Forest was the drummer on Marvin Gaye's 
monumental What's Going On album. 
During Hitsville's final years, Andrew 
Smith, Aaron Smith, Spider Webb, and a 
handful of other drummers also made sig¬ 
nificant contributions. But the shadow that 
was cast by Benny, Pistol, and Uriel was 
too large for almost any drummer in 
Detroit to overcome. 

It has only been in the past decade that 
they have begun to fully grasp the magni¬ 
tude of their musical contributions. They 
were the foundation of a band that was 
responsible for more Number-1 hits than 
The Beatles, The Stones, Elvis, The Beach 
Boys, and Earth, Wind & Fire— combined. 
Drummers all over the world—even with¬ 
out necessarily knowing who these players 
were—have copied them and been inspired 
by their playing. But their most enduring 
gift is the subliminal challenge contained 


in their music that they inadvertently laid at 
the feet of future generations: Whatever 
you do in life, do it from the heart, or don't 
do it at all. 

History views Motown as the tale of 
Berry Gordy and his stable of vocal stars 
and songwriters. To musicians in general, 
the perspective is turned around 180°; it's the 
saga of an all-star band with a revolving line¬ 
up of vocalists, songwriters, and producers. 
But to drummers in particular, Motown is the 
story of Benny Benjamin, Pistol Allen, and 
Uriel Jones. 

Zoro is one of the world's premier touring 
drummers, appearing with acts like New 
Edition, Bobby Brown, Lenny Kravitz, and, 
currently, Frankie Valli. He is also one of the 
most in-demand educators, clinicians, and 
writers on the contemporary drumming 
scene. He has recently completed his first 
book, The Commandments Of R&B 
Drumming: A Comprehensive Guide To 
Soul, Funk & Hip Hop (Warner Bros. Pub.). 

Allan (Dr. Licks) Slutsky is a Philadelphia- 
based guitarist, arranger, and author. He is 
the recipient of the 1989 Ralph J. Gleason 
Music Book Award for his work Standing In 
The Shadow Of Motown: The Life And 
Music Of Legendary Bassist James Jamerson 
(Hal Leonard Pub.). His latest book, co¬ 
authored with Chuck Silverman, is The 
Funkmasters: The Great James Brown 
Rhythm Sections 1960-1972 (Warner Bros. 




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story py wi lam t. mi er * photos py pau a raia 


















that Billy Ward isn't a household-name drummer is a shame. 


t alk about "talent deserving wider recognition." In a drumming 
world filled with highly touted so-so players, Ward is a certifi¬ 
able monster—impressive chops, an incredibly solid feel, a vast 
knowledge of styles, and a tme sense of touch (practically a lost art 
these days). Oh, and be sure to include Billy's playful, gregarious 
personality on that list; it adds a sparkle to any music he touches. 


W atching Ward play is simply a treat. 

Sitting across from the man in his New 
York project studio, DrumPike, where he 
spends most of his time adding drum and 
percussion tracks to various LA and 
Nashville sides, you can't help but be 
impressed. Radically diverse images merge 
and then slap you upside the head when 
Billy's behind the kit: Purdie's soul-brother 
swagger, Bonham's bombast, a hint of 
Zigaboo Modeliste's slipperiness, the down- 
home honesty of Levon Helm, and, believe 
it or not, a good dose of Elvin Jones' magi¬ 
cal touch and relentless pulse. Ward deals 


these influences with the savvy of a 
master cardsharp. 

Billy's ability to astutely balance the cre¬ 
ative with the tried-and-true has made him 
very employable. And the calls come from a 
broad, head-scratching spectrum: Robbie 
Robertson, Carly Simon, Bill Evans, Richard 
Marx, Ace Frehley—even Yoko Ono! 
Soundtrack work for Ward has also been 
plentiful, and the drummer has added his flare 
for the dramatic to such flicks as Tom Hanks' 
That Thing You Do, Steven Seagal's Under 
Siege, and Whoopi Goldberg's Sister Act. 

All that work might provide a good living 


for a pro, but it doesn't necessarily satisfy 
one's creative soul.... 

e nter Two Hands Clapping, the brilliant, 
self-produced album featuring Ward 
sparring one-on-one with heavyweights Bill 
Champlin, John Patitucci, Joy Askew, Glen 
Phillips, Jim Beard, and Chris Whitley. 
Here's where Billy's twenty years' worth of 
carefully governed pro experience erupts; 
here's where the man gets to play. 

Eight years in the making, THC offers a 
breathtaking glimpse of master musicians 
soaring high—and without a net. Each duo 
performance was captured live in the studio, 
and the interplay between the participants is 
a major factor in the music's success. The 
scope of the material here is wide, from 
quiet, introspective moments that Billy beau¬ 
tifully colors, to full-tilt bombastics where 
the drummer pulls out all the stops. 

If enough people hear this disc, if enough 
people hear Billy Ward, there'll be a new 
name added to drumming's "A" list. 



I like to set up differently for each musical setting, says 
Billy Ward about his drumset. "I have bass drums that 
range from 14" to 28" and snares that range from 10" to 
16", but my basic 'starting point' kit would be as follows:' 


"When I'm called to do a session I try to bring more drums and cymbals than I'll need," Ward says. 
"Having a choice is important, and changing a snare drum within a drumset alters the entire sonic 
picture of the kit! 

"Over the course of my career I've used massive kits with lots of toms, especially with The 
Knack and Ace Frehley," Billy continues, "but I prefer having less equipment in front of me. Using 
a smaller kit makes it far less tempting for me to play something 'choppy': I think I play more musi¬ 
cally with less. Also, using a kit with only two or three toms is much easier to record." 


Drum Workshop 
(custom-made of spruce) in 
a black sparkle to burgundy 
sunburst fade finish 

A. 4x15 Craviotto solid wal¬ 
nut snare ("old reliable") 

B. 8x12 tom 

C. 16x16 floor tom 

D. 16x20 bass drum 

Sabian 

1. 10" AA Mini Hats 

2. 18" AAX Stage crash 

3. 20" HH Rock ride 

4. 20" AA Rocktagon on 


top of a 12 AA Mini 
Chinese (mounted on 
an x-hat) 

all DW, includ¬ 
ing a double pedal 

Aquarian Satin 

Finish 

Trueline TG 

(enlarged ball grip) Jazz or 
TG 5A model with wood tip 
Taos drums, 
various Rhythm Tech prod¬ 
ucts ("I love their brass jin¬ 
gle Hat Trick.") 


MODERN DRUMMER JULY W99 













WFM: In this day and age, when so many 
drummers are obsessed with developing— 
and displaying —chops, listening to you 
play is a pleasure: You have such a beauti¬ 
ful touch on the instrument. 

BW: Thanks, but you can't really blame 
drummers: We all focus on technique, 
especially when we're coming up. I do 
think it's sad that drum teachers don't 
focus more on touch and tone, though. A 
beginning trumpet player is taught the 
importance of tone from the start; it's con¬ 
sidered part of the instrument. Why isn't 
that the case with drums? I think that's part 
of the reason why there are so many drum¬ 
mers out there who are focused on devel¬ 
oping more dexterity as opposed to being 
better musicians. 

WFM: Did you have teachers early on 
who covered the musical stuff? 

BW: Not really, although I had a great fun¬ 
damental background from a local drum¬ 
mer in Cincinnati—where I grew up— 
named Jack Volk. He taught me the rudi¬ 
ments, rhythmic patterns, the Chapin 
book—all the basics. And he got me off to 
a good start, because I was playing in 
bands by the time I was in sixth grade. But 


basically I was just your normal schmuck 
drummer. I had plenty of facility but didn't 
know anything about touch, groove, or 
taste. 

WFM: What finally made you aware of 
these things? 

BW: I don't think I was aware of touch 


until I really started listening to jazz, 
around seventh or eighth grade. First it was 
Joe Morello with Dave Brubeck, then 
Coltrane's My Favorite Things with Elvin. 
Miles Smiles was my first Miles record. 
And then I discovered people like Sun Ra 
and Ornette Coleman—oh, and Mel Lewis. 


MODERN DRUMMER JULY 1 999 












Once you start hearing people like Mel, Blakey, and 
Elvin, and you hear those incredible sounds, you 
have to go "duh." I once read a great quote from Art 
Blakey: "I hear violins in my cymbals." That says 
so much. 

So I started to be aware of touch and tone, but at 
that point I thought it had something to do with the 
gear. I became very obsessive about tuning drums 
and finding the right cymbals. In high school I 
bought a small Gretsch set after seeing an Alan 
Dawson clinic. I wanted that sound. 

WFM: When did you realize it was something more 
than the gear? 

BW: Not until I was in college. I went to the 
Conservatory of Music in Cincinnati for a year and 
a half, mainly to keep from going to Vietnam. It was 
easy for me because that's where I'm from and I 
was lucky enough to receive a scholarship. Plus it 
meant I could stay in town and keep playing in my 
local rock band. 

So I went to the Conservatory, which had a pro¬ 
gram that was a lot like Juilliard: They didn't have 
any jazz studies program. But I was up front with 
them: "I'm going to play jazz." And they said, "Oh 
yeah, practice the marimba." I loved playing marim¬ 
ba, but honestly, I just sucked at it. And I really 
hated performing classical music. I just can't count 
three hundred measures and then play one triangle 
note. And the stress involved with that...it just 
wasn't fun. I absolutely love listening to that music 
and I find it very inspiring, but participating in it 
didn't give me that soaring feeling I got from play¬ 
ing drumset. 

While I was at the Conservatory, I had a teacher, 
Ed Wuebold, who was in the Cincinnati Symphony. 
He was really into tone, and he felt it was his duty 
to train me. He was like, "I know you're a jazz guy, 
but I don't know anything about it. You're on your 
own there. But I'm going to teach you what I do 
know. Today's lesson: tambourine." So I studied the 
legit stuff with him. 

When we got to working on timpani, things got 
interesting for me. There's a guy named Fred 
Hinger, who I don't know, but who was a concert 
timpanist and had a small mallet company—Hinger 
Touch Tone, I think it was called. Eddie Wuebold 
knew of Hinger's technique and taught it to me. 
Some of these things were pretty out: Eddie had me 
bouncing tennis balls off the top of the timpani so 
that I could learn about getting a sound out of a 
drum! 

We worked on the Hinger timpani grip, which is 
where you kind of roll the stick over the top joint of 
your index finger and everything kind of pivots 
around that. Working on that really helped my 
stroke. I know it's given me the ability to play really 
loud with small sticks. I can also dig in and it's 


ally's quickie chart system 


When I'm called to do a session or rehearsal, I sometimes find it hard to remember all of the music I'm pre¬ 
sented with, especially if I'm working a lot. Sometimes I'll find myself playing in several different situations in 
the same week! I've found that having the ability to create a quick, condensed, and accurate "road map" of a 
piece of music is extremely helpful. I've come up with some short cuts for writing these "quickie" charts that 
may be of help to you. 

By using the following system, I'm able to take an involved piece, even a fourteen-page drum chart 
(something I recently had to do on a session for George Russell), and condense it down to four pages. That 
means fewer page turns! Of course, most of us play music that's primarily about feel, where not too much 
detail is needed. But this system is very helpful in that setting as well. 


your basic chart 

Sure, most of us freelance drummers write "cheat sheets." Some people I know write them on index 
cards; I sometimes write them directly on my snare head! But most quickie charts basically cover the form of 
the song—how it starts, what happens in the middle, how it ends. But I like to add a few other items. 

At the top of my charts I'll sometimes write the title of another song I know that has a similar tempo, 
groove, and—most importantly— attitude. I also write down a drummer's name to help me zero in on that 
attitude. For example, if the song has a really big, powerful, open-rock feel, I might write "Bonham." If the 
song is a sexy R&B tune with lots of ghost notes, I'll write "Purdie." 

If there are predetermined fills that I need to play, I'll put a squiggle where they happen and trust myself 
to play a fill that fits the song. If the songwriter wants a specific fill, I write it out. Then there's no mistake. 


_ true to form _ 

All popular music I've encountered has somewhat consistent qualities. There's usually an intro (some¬ 
times called a "vamp") at the beginning, followed by a verse, and eventually what some people call the 
"refrain" or "chorus." Sometimes there's a bridge in the middle. In jazz or other perhaps "harder to peg" 
music, musicians title each section with a letter, like so: A = verse; B = refrain or chorus; C = bridge; D = 
another new section. This basic system works and is very easy to understand. 

Now that you understand the basic form found in most simple charts, here are the abbreviations / use for 
the different sections of tunes: 

1. INTRO = The opening section of a tune. 

2. VAMP = Where the rhythm section repeats chord changes at the beginning of (or after) any section. 

3. VI = This indicates the first verse. Subsequent verses would be notated as V2, V3...you get the idea. 

4. PRE = I call the section that usually follows the verse the "pre-chorus," because it always builds to the 
chorus. 

5. CHO = This indicates the chorus. 

6. BDG = If there's a bridge, this is how I label it. 

7.1 use a couple of different markings for solos. If a solo is over the verse chord changes, I name the instru¬ 
ment soloing and the section of the solo. For example, a keyboard solo played over verse chord changes 
would be notated KYBD V. If there's a guitar solo played over chorus changes, I write GTR CFIO. 

8. After all this stuff has happened, there's either a fade ending or a real ending. If it's a fade ending over a 
repeating chorus, I'll write CFIO FADE. If the song has a real ending, I'll write OUTRO. 

One other pointer about writing out the form: If I have the time, I'll use two different color highlighting pens 
to mark the choruses and the pre-choruses. That makes it very easy to see where I'm at in the chart. 


sampes 


Let's look at a couple of exam¬ 
ples to see how easy this system 
actually is. This first chart is the 
one I used for the song 
"Devaney's Goat/The Whistling 
Postman," which is the duet I 
played with John Patitucci on my 
album, Two Hands Clapping. You 
can easily see the form (letters), 
the length of the sections by mea¬ 
sure (numbers written below the 
letters), and the styles and solos 
that occur. 


To give you an idea of how 
this works with a song you might 
be familiar with, I wrote out a 
quickie chart for the Joan 
Osborne hit "(What If God Was) 
One Of Us?" It only took me two 
listens to write it, and now I can 
sit down and play the song with¬ 
out a problem. 

At the top of the chart I wrote 
the basic beat of the tune. The 
attitude is addressed: "Take Your 
Time, Big Guy!" tells me to play 
with an open and relaxed feel. I 
mentioned earlier that the squig- 
gles indicate fills, and you'll see 
them in a few spots here. The 
"flags" (looking a bit like check 
marks) indicate cymbal crashes. 
The "C.S." in the last line is how I 
indicate cross-stick. 


H 8 I 







The very process of taking the 
time to write out a chart helps my 
easily distracted mind remember 
the songs. At the beginning of a 
new gig, charts are indispensable. 

I feel more confident and play better with them. And the best part of all of this is, when you nail the arrange¬ 
ment and lay down a solid performance, your bandmates think you're a genius! 



MODERN DRUMMER JULY 1999 



































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Billy uses various 
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Billy Ward 

Modern Drummer: 
Watching you play, 
you do have a very 
relaxed grip. 

Billy Ward: 

"It's incredibly loose. 
It's one of the 
reasons I play 
TRUELINE drumsticks. 
They have a hump 
in the handle, 
which helps me 
hold on to the sticks. 
My grip is so relaxed 
that, if 1 didn't have 
that hump, the sticks 
would fall out 
of my hands!" 

Excerpted from 
Modern Drummer 
Magazine July *99 


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billys favorite drummers 


Meat 'n* potatoes = Art Blakey and John Bonham 
Tasteful = Ringo Starr and Papa Jo Jones 
Groovin' = Jeff Porcaro and Mel Lewis 
Fire = Keith Moon and Elvin Jones 
Wonderfully surprising = Paul Motian and Joey Baron 
Funky = Zigaboo Modeliste and Bernard Purdie 
Favorite rock ballad fills = Nigel Olsson 
Unbelievable chops = Terry Bozzio and Vinnie Colaiuta 
| Down-home and creative = Levon Helm and Jim Keltner 
Versatile and always great = Steve Gadd 







For more fun "Ward-isms," drumming tips and 
thoughts, and the place to go to order Billy's amazing 
album, Two Hands Clapping, check out his 
Web site at www.billyward.com. 


totally comfortable. There's no stress in my 
hands. 

WFM: Watching you play, you do have a 
very relaxed, loose grip. 

BW: It's incredibly loose. It's one of the 
reasons I play Trueline drumsticks. They 
have a hump in the handle, which helps me 
hold on to the sticks. My grip is so relaxed 
that if I didn't have that hump, the sticks 
would fall out of my hands! 

When you tense up to play, everything 
sounds bad. Staying loose is one of the 
keys to getting a good sound. And if you 
think that by really gripping down hard 
you'll be able to play fast—forget it. When 
I play a single-stroke roll, it's the most 
soothing thing in the world. You'll see 
some guys with their eyes bugging out of 
their heads and muscles burning. You can 
only go so fast doing it that way, and it 
doesn't sound as good. 

It's funny, I don't practice a lot anymore, 
but when I feel like I do need to practice, I 
always start with single-stroke rolls. And I 
don't do it to work on playing fast. I do it 
to get the roll to feel lovely and to have it 
sound smooth. Then I'll play the roll on 
every drum on the kit. When it's sounding 
good, then I know my playing is pretty 
close to where it should be. Then I start 
groovin'...and when I stumble, I stop and 
work on what caused me to stumble. 

WFM: Let's get back to the drumset for a 
minute, specifically your interest in being a 
jazz drummer. 

BW: I wanted to play jazz fairly early on. 
And what really hooked me was a lesson I 
had with Elvin Jones. I was seventeen. 
WFM: How did that come about? 


BW: I came to New York to buy my first 
set of KS. I had met Mel Lewis at a concert 
he gave near my hometown, and he told 
me, "If you want decent KS, you've got to 
go to New York, to Ippolito's drum shop." 
So I went to New York, to Ippolito's, and 
there, just hanging out, was Papa Jo Jones! 
He was a bit cantankerous, but he helped 
me pick out my first set of KS! Then Frank 
Ippolito said, "Do you want to have a les¬ 
son? We have Tony Williams and Elvin 
Jones available." And I must have looked 
at him, just mesmerized: "Duh, I want 
Tony." But then it occurred to me: I really 
know Tony. I can't do what he does, but I 
understand it. I don't understand Elvin at 
all. So I asked for Elvin instead. 

That lesson with Elvin changed my life. 
We were upstairs in a little room and he 
was on a practice set—these cheap, beat-up 
drums with terrible cymbals. But when he 
played that set he sounded just as good as 
he did on any Trane record. All of those 
sounds were right there. The sound was 
inside of him, not in the gear he was play¬ 
ing. 

WFM: And your fate was sealed.... 

BW: Oh yeah. I wanted to be Elvin. I 
played like him for years. That's pretty 
egocentric to think that you can sound like 
Elvin, but I know that as a jazz drummer 
that's what people said about me: "Ah, he 
sounds like Elvin." I do a pretty good Elvin 
impersonation on the drums. Of course, I 
don't have his touch—those huge hands, 
that magical thing he has. And talk about a 
loose grip: You wonder how he holds onto 
the sticks! 

WFM: It seems like the concept of touch 


MODERN DRUMMER JULY 1999 




















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upper 

'hand 

These are the records that Billy says best represent his drumming: 

Artist 

Billy Ward 

Bill Champlin 
Robbie Robertson 

Jim Beard 

Jim Beard 

Carly Simon 
George Russell 

Album 

Two Hands Clapping 

He Started To Sing 

Storyville 

Lost At The Carnival 

Truly 

Film Noir 

It's About Time 

Under Siege (film soundtrack) 

That Thing You Do (film soundtrack) 

...and here are the ones he's been listening to lately for inspiration: 

Artist 

Tom Waits 
Beatles 

Jimi Hendrix 
James Brown 

Miles Davis 

The Band 

Cat Stevens 

Album 

Bone Machine 
any 
any 
any 
any 

Music From Big Pink 
Greatest Hits 

Drummer 

Brain, Tom Waits 

Ringo Starr 

Mitch Mitchell, Buddy Miles 

Clyde Stubblefield, Jabo Starks 
Tony Williams, Jimmy Cobb, 

Al Foster, etc. 

Levon Helm 

Gerry Conway, Harvey Burns 


was important to you pretty early on. 
You mentioned about how it developed 
from your classical training. Is that 
something you'd recommend other peo¬ 
ple investigate? 

BW: Honestly, if I hadn't been trapped 
in music school I would never have 
practiced it or had the patience to deal 
with it. I'm glad I did. But I want to 
make the point that studying classical 
percussion isn't the only way to devel¬ 
op touch on the instrument. It's like all 
the different religions—I think there are 
a lot of different ways to get to the sun. 

The important thing for drummers to 
learn is how to use their ears. Do you 
hear music in your drums? When you're 
playing a roll, do you hear zzzzz, like a 
violin? Do you hear it as a long note? 

Do you think about the duration of the 
notes you're playing? If you're think¬ 
ing, whole note on a floor tom, do you 
play it as a whole note, or do you actu¬ 
ally play a quarter note with three quar¬ 
ter-note rests? Developing a sensitivity to 
touch and tone is all psychological. 

WFM: Do you have any practical tips for 
drummers wanting to improve their sound 
on the instrument? 

BW: Always record yourself. Don't play 
anywhere without making a tape. And I 
think it's imperative that you record your¬ 
self at gigs. You need that recording to be 
able to go back and hear what you made 
the audience and bandmates sit through! 
I'm sorry, the tape doesn't lie. 

So many times I've played what I 


thought was a burning gig, but then after 
reviewing the tapes, it wasn't so hot. And 
there have been times when I thought I was 
so bad and flat, yet on the tape the perfor¬ 
mance sparkles. Recording yourself is a 
great way to monitor what's going on in 
your playing. 

Drummers should also listen to other 
drummers very carefully—really pick apart 
what they're doing. Say you want to have a 
feel like Kenny Aronoff. Well, you have to 
develop the ears to recognize exactly how 
he's playing his hi-hat, kick drum, and 


snare drum when he's playing a groove. 
And then, after you've got the ears, at least 
then you know what your goal is. 
Hopefully then you can begin to hear how 
close you are. 

Developing a sense of touch and pulling 
a good tone from your instrument all boils 
down to wanting it and hearing it. The 
world is big. Everybody doesn't have to be 
obsessed with having greater speed or dex¬ 
terity. Sure, you can be in a band that 
wants a lot of double bass drumming. 
Some people love it; when I'm in a certain 


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i pememhBr ashing Elvin uhy sometimes i mould plag uiell and otter times i mould 
such. He called it i thoughts: if you're playing and any sentence that starts mi i 
comes into your head, lihe im doing great' or rm going to play a fill here, you're in 
trouble, if pu re thinking that may. you're not playing for the music 


mood I love it. You can develop those 
chops and go there. But you know, look at 
Ringo, man. What a great sound! How 
about Jim Keltner, Billy Higgins, or Levon 
Helm? These are guys who know how to 
get a great sound out of their drums. 

WFM: So you'd say being a good drum¬ 
mer has more to do with the sound you 
produce than the notes you play? 

BW: Absolutely. I would venture to say 
that almost any drummer would become 
the hottest player on the planet if he got 


into his tone enough. Because when you 
get there it leads to being more musical, 
and being more musical leads to more peo¬ 
ple enjoying playing with you, and that 


leads to more and more gigs. 

WFM: So that's your secret to success. 
BW: Well, I don't feel I'm that big of a 
success. I wish I'd figured this stuff out a 
long time ago. 

WFM: What finally turned the light bulb 
on? 

BW: For me, honestly, I think it was hav¬ 
ing my private life safe and secure, feeling 
in love and happy. I needed to get to a 
place where I was able to relax, where I 
didn't feel like I had to prove anything, and 
just get back to what means the most to 
me. 

I've always had this battle: For some 
reason, I've always been able to have quite 
a bit of chops. I used to practice like a 
maniac —but I did back off a bit when I 
was around twenty-one because I realized 
that I didn't want to become some freak 
who couldn't play with anybody. 

WFM: There are a few drummers today 
who seem to be practicing for drum clinic 
performances and not for gigs. 

BW: I have nothing against those types of 
players. I totally respect the effort they put 
into it. But the question I asked myself 
was, Do you want to be a star drummer or 
do you want to play music? 

WFM: Speaking of making music, let's 
talk about Two Hands Clapping. You've 
really shown just how much music can be 
made on a set of drums on that record. 

BW: Thanks. In general, I'm never totally 
happy with the work I've done. There are 
probably only a handful of recordings out 
of the hundreds I've done that I'm satisfied 
with. But I have to admit there's some 
magic on THC, even though I do hear little 
mistakes in the performance here and there. 
WFM: But sometimes those little mistakes 
are the best part. 

BW: Oh yeah, and that's why the album has 
no overdubs or repairs. I believe in that hon¬ 
esty. My favorite music isn't note-perfect. 
In a way, when something is perfect, you 
don't get the art. It's like Miles Davis: He 
cracked a note, and he was a genius. Miles 
made it come out in the end like he meant to 



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do it that way—a beautiful mistake. 

WFM: How did you come up with the idea 
to make a duets record in the first place? 
BW: It started a while back. I worked with 
Robbie Robertson on his Storyville record. I 
did pre-production with him and then actu¬ 
ally made it on the record, even though he 
brought in several big-name drummers to 
play on the rest of it. But at the end of the 
first day of recording, the producer said, 
"You know, Robbie, Billy would be really 
great to do that song 'Two Rivers."' And I 
was like, "Yeah. What is it? Let's do it." 
The producer just set up a click and Robbie 
said, "I'll play and you'll hear what to do." 
So we hit it—no rehearsal. And it was just 
so exhilarating that it was ridiculous—two 
people playing together on the spur of the 
moment. That's when the idea hit me. 

The other thing that led to my doing this 
record is I'd been playing at a club out in 
Los Angeles called The Mint with a quartet 
led by Bill Champlin. We never rehearsed. 
We just showed up and played. I have 
stacks of cassettes upstairs of those gigs— 
unbelievable stuff. But I realized then that 
people like Bill are capable of so much. 
There are some amazingly talented people 


out there, and I thought if I could sit down 
with this caliber of player in a duet setting, 
some interesting things would happen. 

So I decided to give it a try, and I asked 
Bill if he would do it. We weren't sure 
what we would play, but then he called up 
and said, "I'm working on this song and 
it's perfect for you. You own this groove." 
I was like, "Okay," and then he said, "Why 
don't you come over and help me write it?" 
"Who, me?" So I walked into Bill's huge 
house—this was the first time I'd been 
there—and we sat down at the grand piano 
together. There I am, sitting next to Bill 
Champlin, who was a major hero of mine 
when I was sixteen. He said, "This is the 
kind of thing I was thinking about," and he 
played what sounded like a complete 
song—beautiful, perfect. And I was like, 
"What am I doing here? The song's written 
and it's great." He said, "Well, what do 
you want the song to be about?" So I just 
said, "What you played sounds kind of 
churchy; let's make it about TV preachers 
who suck up people's money." He said, 
"Okay," and then he sang the first verse, 
like that, [snaps fingers] I just started 
screaming: "You bum, you're so talented, I 


hate you." [laughs] That was how "Sound 
Of The Rain" came about. 

When we went to record "Rain," we were 
just completely exhilarated. I have to admit 
that the song did take us four takes to get, 
though, because we kept overachieving in 
the middle—really pushing the envelope. 
But we were so happy with what we came 
up with that we wanted to record more, so 
we laid down "High Heel Sneakers" and 
"Danger Zone" in one take each. We had 
played those at The Mint as a quartet. 

That's how the project started. I felt so 
good about how those tracks sounded that I 
was determined to go forward with it. 
WFM: What was the game plan? Did you 
have specific people in mind that you 
wanted to play with? 

BW: At that point all I really knew was I 
had a good concept. I just started thinking 
about who I'd like to spar with! Around the 
time I did the tracks with Bill I was playing 
with Chris Whitley, and we were touring 
with Toad The Wet Sprocket. They were all 
friends of mine, especially [Toad 
vocalist/guitarist] Glen Phillips. He had 
never played with anybody else outside of 
their band, ever. So I approached Glen 



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because I was really impressed with his 
musicianship, and he agreed to do it. We 
were going to write something together, but 
he had a ballad, "Be Careful," that Toad 
didn't want. When I heard it, I just thought, 
"This tune would be the perfect soft under¬ 
belly for my record." So we recorded it, 
and it turned out great. I love the sound of 
Glen's voice. 

After that I was busy with several other 
projects and didn't get back to it for a 
while. I didn't know who I would record 
with next, but then I finally talked to Chris 
Whitley about doing it. We were both so 
busy that the only day we could do it was 
New Year's Eve Day, in New York. I think 
it was in 1993, so several years had passed. 
WFM: It's funny that the performances on 
THC were recorded years apart, because 
the record has a certain continuity to it. 

BW: It's funny that way. Also, the styles 
of music on it are all over the map. But the 
thing is I'm on half of everything, so 
there's the continuity of me! [laughs] 
WFM: So the record was completed over 
the course of many years? 

BW: Yes. This was a labor of love, but it 
was certainly a side project for me. I got to 


it when I could, and of course, I had to 
work around the other players' schedules. 
WFM: Are there any particular highlights 
for you on THC? 

BW: Frankly, the whole thing is a high¬ 
light—not so much because of what I 
played, but because of what these other 
incredible musicians brought to it. 

Listen to "Wee Small Hours" with Joy 
Askew. Her performance on that is just 
beautiful. And I was so happy we did that 
song because I wanted to play brushes on 
the record. I do some traditional-sounding 
brush work on it, and there are some odd 
bits where I'm filling on the tom-toms. It 
sounds like kitty cats running across the 
toms. I love that. 

WFM: You mentioned wanting to play 
brushes. Did you set out to play a lot of dif¬ 
ferent styles? 

BW: To be honest, it just kind of worked 
out that way. 

WFM: Even the Irish track with John 
Patitucci? 

BW: It was kind of funny how that worked 
out. I was working with John at my studio 
on a different project. But at one point I 
played him the track I did with Chris 


Whitley. And he said, "That's amazing! 
I've got to meet this guy. Let me play on 
that track!" "John, I'm sorry, but it's a 
duet—you can't play on it." He said, 
"Then you and I have got to do a duet." 
And I was like, "Wow! Okay, bass and 
drums, why not? What are we going to 
do?" And then he said, out of the blue, the 
magic words: "Find an Irish tune." 

So I found some Irish tunes and sent him 
a recording. Well, they were extremely dif¬ 
ficult to play on bass. John shedded that 
part for a long time, and then he made it his 
own. I think if bass players hear that track 
there's going to be a lot of suicides! It's so 
amazing. I love what we came up with on 
that one. 

The man I really wanted to get on the 
record was Jim Beard, who is one of my 
dearest friends. Jim is another one of these 
incredibly talented people who I really 
wanted to duet with. Jim has the largest 
ears in the music world—he hears every¬ 
thing. The tracks with him are incredible. 
WFM: The best part of THC is the inter¬ 
play between you and the other musicians. 
That interplay makes the music so alive. 
BW: I think that's just a natural phenome- 



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non when you have two good musicians 
listening to each other. The musical focus 
is just so tight. It's like having a conversa¬ 
tion with one other person. If it's a quartet, 
it's like a conversation between four peo¬ 
ple; maybe the discussion isn't quite as 
personal. The other thing is, these people 
are such great players that I was complete¬ 
ly free to go wherever my heart desired 
musically. 

WFM: Another nice thing about the record 
for drummers is all of the cool sounds you 
played—great drum sounds, funky cymbals 
and metals with all sorts of personality, 
shakers on drums, rattles, bumps, 
buzzes.... 

BW: First of all, the credit has to go to the 
engineers for being able to capture all of 
the weird stuff I played. These guys were 
all world-class engineers, except for me. I 
engineered a couple of tunes. I do have 
some experience in the studio, although 
obviously I'm not a world-class engineer. I 
just got lucky. 

You mentioned before about how cohe¬ 
sive-sounding the record is. I agree with 
you. But what's amazing to me about that 


is we got that result with the tracks being 
recorded in different studios by different 
engineers. Somehow, magically, it all 
merged together sonically. 

WFM: And what about all of the different 
sounds you played? 

BW: Well, it was a different drumset for 
each track. I tailored the kit to match the 
music. I knew that one track would be 
rowdy, with heavy drumming, so I used a 
big kit. On some of the lighter things I used 
a small setup with very small drums. 
That's why I love the guys at DW. They've 
made me some beautiful instruments in all 
sorts of weird sizes—16" bass drums, tiny 
snare drums—those sorts of things. I hard¬ 
ly ever use the stock sizes. Plus I own so 
much equipment, stuff I've amassed over 
the years. 

I found that using a new or different 
setup for each setting inspired me. I was 
exploring the sounds of the kit and fitting 
them into the performance. 

WFM: Some guys freak out if they're not 
on "their" kit. 

BW: Well, maybe I'm still ajazzbo at 
heart—I like to take chances, I like to 


improvise. The idea of first discovery to 
me is so important. You have to take 
chances, you have to experiment, you have 
to explore the unknown. That's where the 
cool stuff is. It makes me happy to play 
that way. I get excited by it. 

WFM: Most artists develop "their" sound, 
"their" setup, and stick with it. 

BW: Sabian has asked me, "What's your 
cymbal setup?" And I say, "With who?" 
I've got six ride cymbals and I usually use 
little hi-hats, but not always. It depends: 
How loud is the music? What's the 
aesthetic? 

About your point of finding your own 
sound, I love that idea. To me, everybody 
is unique. People complain about musi¬ 
cians playing too much like their heroes. I 
don't think that's a problem at all, because 
no matter how much you copy someone 
else, eventually your own voice will 
emerge. There may be an influence in your 
playing, but it will always be you. 

Let's pick the "president" of drumming, 
Steve Gadd. If Steve Gadd tried to play 
like you or me, he couldn't do it. If you or I 
wanted to play like him, we could never do 




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MODERN DRUMMER JULY IW 










it. And if Steve and I wanted to play like 
you, we could never do that. You can try, 
but your uniqueness is inherent in you. 
And that's why I believe that if young 
drummers have a favorite drummer, soak it 
up, become them. Doing that helped me 
develop. When I wanted to play jazz, I 
focused on Elvin. When I wanted to learn 
how to groove, I studied Harvey Mason. 

I did a record in 1979 for a guy named 
Dean Friedman, who was like an Elton 
John kind of guy. He had a hit out that 
Rick Marotta played on, and then I did the 
tour. Then, after the tour, I went in to do 
his next record, but I was fired because my 
time sucked and the producer kept com¬ 
plaining that I wasn't hitting the drums 
hard enough. That has changed. A few 
years ago I was recording for Don Was, 
and he said, "Jesus, you're louder than 
Kenny Aronoff!" 

But because I was fired off that Friedman 
gig, I knew I had to get my time together. 
George Benson was really big then, and 
Harvey Mason was his drummer. I just 
thought Harvey sounded so beautiful, the 
way he danced on the hi-hat and the way his 


time felt. So I studied him—I became 
him—and that helped my playing. But I'm 
sure no one hearing my playing at that point 
would have said I was a Harvey clone. 
WFM: Even with all of your years in the 
business, you still seem very positive about 
music, very energetic. 

BW: When I'm working on a project I'm 
very exuberant and hyper. And when I'm 
excited about something I can't be held 
back. 

WFM: That's probably a reason why peo¬ 
ple hire you. 

BW: It's also a reason some people don't 
hire me. A lot of times people like it if 
you're just a little more gray. I get excited, 
I want to get into the music, I want to bring 
a lot to it. Some people want you to come 
in and just do the job—lay down the track 
and go home. I can certainly try to do that, 
but it's not satisfying. 

WFM: I'd think a producer or artist would 
want musicians who play from the heart. 
BW: You have to watch that, though. You 
have to balance the highs and the lows. I'll 
tell you, I've had to work very hard at con¬ 
trolling myself on a gig. I'd be up there, the 


music would be soaring, and bam, I'd get 
so excited that I'd launch into some out¬ 
landish fill. It would be corning from a 
place of total joy, but it might not be 
appropriate. I had to learn to control that. 

I think the people who hire me know 
what I'm about. I tend to work with slight¬ 
ly stranger artists, people who are incredi¬ 
bly talented but who go their own way— 
you know, like Robbie Robertson, Yoko 
Ono, Jimmy Webb. When I work with 
more normal people, I'm not as satisfied. I 
love it when I'm recording with an artist 
and they say, "Billy, I really want you. I 
want your magic. If you feel like doing 
something, just do it." 

WFM: Let's talk a bit more about keeping 
control of your emotions when you play. 
You mentioned getting excited and ruining 
"the moment" by overplaying. How did 
you learn to control that? 

BW: I actually found a new way to think 
about it from baseball. I'm a baseball 
freak; I love baseball's intangibles and the 
Zen qualities of the game. Tom Seaver, not 
only one of the greatest pitchers of all time 
but also one of the most intellectual, had a 



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MODERN DRUMMER JULY 1999 














term for controlling one's emotions: "stay¬ 
ing inside yourself." If he got worked up 
and threw a fastball as hard as he possibly 
could, what would happen is the ball 
would kind of die and not move as fast. 
Hitters would be all over it. But when he 
stayed inside himself, in other words stay¬ 
ing inside his mechanics, even if he was in 
front of 60,000 people, he would keep his 
composure. I love that kind of psychologi¬ 
cal mindset. 

I mentioned earlier about a lesson I had 
with Elvin. He's way into the mental 
aspects of drumming. I remember asking 
him why sometimes I would play well and 
other times I would just suck. He called it 
"I thoughts." In other words, if you're 
playing and any sentence that starts with 
"I" comes into your head, like "I'm doing 
great" or "I'm going to play a fill here," 
you're in trouble. Elvin told me that if 
you're thinking that way, you're not play¬ 
ing for the music. I'll never forget that. 
WFM: I'd like to get your thoughts on 
being a working musician today. You seem 
to keep busy, going from tours to session 
work. The stuff you do isn't always high- 
profile, but you continue to work. 

BW: Sadly, most of the records I've made 
have flopped, [laughs] Frankly, my career 
is something that has slowly built over 
time. And I still occasionally have slow 
periods, like everybody else. But in general 
I've been fortunate. 

I really don't have any solid tips for 


drummers looking to improve their careers. 
I don't do all of the things you're supposed 
to—all of the schmoozing and networking. 
One of my best friends, Doane Perry, 
who's with Jethro Tull, has a routine that 
he swears by: Whenever he's not working, 
he says that if he starts practicing, he starts 
getting calls. I thought he was full of it. 
But you know what? I've tried it a couple 
of times, and it works! 

Lately I've been very interested in doing 
clinics. I feel like I've got a lot to offer in 
that area. But because I'm not good at 
being a self-promoter, it's tough for me to 
break into that scene. I know of guys who 
are out there doing clinics all of the time, 
and no disrespect to anybody, but some of 
those guys don't have a tenth of the resume 
I have. I don't understand it, but I'm trying 
to figure it out. 

As far as working more goes, it all boils 
down to one thing: not sucking. It's a 
tough thing to do, but if you're not work¬ 
ing, take an honest look at yourself. Are 
there things you can do that would make 
you more employable—either in the way 
you play or in your attitude? If nobody 
wants to play with you, then figure out 
why. And if you've really spoiled things 
for yourself in your town, you may have to 
be prepared to move. 

WFM: At this point, what do you do to 
maintain your drumming skills? 

BW: I basically don't practice unless I have 
something coming up that I know I'll need 


a lot of chops for. For instance, when I 
knew I would be recording with Chris 
Whitley for 77/C, I knew we were going to 
be really pushing it. The producer in me 
told me that I'd better get my chops in 
shape. 

WFM: You're wailing on that track with 
him, "Some Mortal Drama," especially 
with the double pedal. 

BW: I ripped that stuff off from my friend 
Gregg Bissonette. In fact, when I play 
those licks, that stuff between the hands 
and feet, I hear Gregg's name: "Gregg 
Bissonette, Gregg Bissonette." That's how 
I play it! [laughs] I told Gregg that I got 
that from him, and he said, "I got all of that 
stuff from Terry Bozzio!" Everything goes 
back to Terry, [laughs] 

I find that when I'm not practicing all 
that much I lose certain things. But you 
know what? I also gain a lot. I come back 
to the instrument sort of refreshed, with a 
child-like excitement. Besides, you've got 
to be careful when you practice. I would 
never want to practice something inappro¬ 
priate that I would end up bringing to a 
gig, regurgitating it all over the stage. 
WFM: What about maintaining groove and 
feel? Do you "just have it" at this point? 
BW: I never "just have it." Your time can 
always be improved, and I think every 
drummer will hear flaws in their own per¬ 
formances. 

WFM: Some of the grooves you play on 
the different records you've done feel 


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great. What types of things would you rec¬ 
ommend other drummers do to improve 
their feel? 

BW: There are the standard things that 
everyone talks about: playing with 
metronomes and such. But another thing 
drummers should think about is the bal¬ 
ance of the components within the groove. 
How loud is the hi-hat compared to the 
snare? How loud is the snare compared to 
the kick? I use small hi-hats now, because, 
to me, they should have less of a presence 
in the groove than the kick or snare. 

WFM: How small? 

BW: We're talking 10" hats—the Sabian 
Mini Hats. I even have 6's, but normally I 
use 10's. If you pick them carefully they'll 
record beautifully, and they don't bleed 
into the snare mic'. For live work they're 
harder to play. If you aren't into touch, you 
don't have a chance with them. You've 
gotta work to get the sound. 

So the first thing is to be hip to the hi-hat 
not being as loud as the snare drum, unless 
you're wanting that way-on-top Motown 
kind of sound. The hi-hat is just a little 
undertow between the push and pull of the 


kick and snare. When playing rock, the 
kick and snare are everything. In jazz, it's 
all happening up on the ride cymbal— 
that's what's dictating the time. 

WFM: Let's talk about your recording stu¬ 
dio, DrumPike. 

BW: DrumPike came about when I moved 
back to New York from LA, where I had 
2,500 square feet of space and seventeen- 
foot ceilings filled with gear. I needed stor¬ 
age and practice space in New York. At the 
same time I was starting to get calls from 
producers who wanted me to play on pro¬ 
jects that were happening in Nashville and 
LA, but they couldn't afford to fly me out. 
I realized that if I could put my own studio 
together, those producers could send me 
tapes that I could overdub drums on. Some 
producers I know were really interested in 
this and were supportive, so I made the 
investment in some recording gear and set 
it up in my New York space. 

WFM: Do you have a background in engi¬ 
neering? 

BW: I don't have much, except that I've 
done a ton of sessions and some producing 
over the years. When I made the decision 


to do this I started quizzing my engineer 
friends about how to do it and what gear to 
buy. I hardly knew anything, I just jumped 
in. Fortunately, I bought good stuff, equip¬ 
ment that's designed to record drums. 
WFM: That's an interesting niche you've 
created. 

BW: I know, and it's really fun. I get to 
work alone. I don't have to explain any¬ 
thing to anybody. Usually these producers 
are people I've worked with before, so 
they trust me. They send me a tape and 
say, "If you hear something, play it." So I 
go nuts and experiment with all sorts of 
gear and ways of playing. I might play the 
kit with my hands and mike it from 
extremely close range, or use three differ¬ 
ent bass drums and a gong. I mean, God 
only knows what I'm going to hear. But if 
I get too out I always call: "I'm doing 
something really weird. Is that okay?" 
WFM: Maybe that's the charm of Billy 
Ward. 

BW: The weirdness? I wonder. It could be. 




MODERN DRUMMER JULV E999 











) 


TALE 

Of A Drum Line 

A DOCUMENTARY OF THE MIND 

Part 2 


byLeeRudnicki 

A s we continue our story from last month, the 1993 edition of 
the Santa Clara Vanguard has been put together from a motley 
group of rookies and volunteers, with only a few veterans to 
lend stability. The staff, including the author, has implemented vir¬ 
tually every idea they can conceive of to bring the drum line 
together, but rehearsals and early performances have been disas¬ 
ters. We re-join the story after the corps has begun its summer 
touring season. 

Scene 6 

A Very Strange Place In Kentucky 

[Music: "Twilight Zone” by Golden Earring] It's a few weeks 
after our humiliating first public performance, and although the 
entire corps has made a dramatic improvement during that time, 
this fact appears to escape the drum line at this particular moment. 
We are now somewhere in Kentucky—and in the midst of the 
worst pre-show warm-up of the season. The drummers are sudden¬ 
ly and inexplicably unable to play even the most basic exercises 
cleanly. The drum staff eventually abandons the warm-up altogeth¬ 
er, leaving the drummers with explicit instructions to get their 
#@%! together. 

Unfortunately, they don't, and the entire corps proceeds to have 
a terrible performance that could very well be our new "worst 
show of the season." To add to our misery, periodic rain showers 
have left the field slippery, and corps members fall down into the 
wet grass continually throughout the show. I wonder what you get 
for last place with a full-corps score of 9? A "Thank you for 
attending" card from the mayor? I guess we'll find out when the 
scores are announced. 

The less-than-exemplary performance inspires the staff to under¬ 
take an expedition to a local convenience store to drown our sor¬ 
rows in soft drinks and junk food. As we return to the field, we 
hear distant strains of the victory concert, which we are sure is 


being performed by one of our competitors. But the closer we get 
to the stadium, the more the music begins to sound like our show. 
As we enter the parking lot, our bus driver gleefully informs us 
that the corps had its highest score of the season tonight, and we 
have somehow managed to win the competition! 

You've got to be kidding. 

We may have had a number of good performances recently, but 
this was definitely not one of them. Oh, I get it. We're in the 
Twilight Zone. Thanks for the trophy, Mr. Serling. 

Scene 7 

Back On The Bus 

[Music: "To Wish Impossible Things" by The Cure[ Following 
the Kentucky mystery victory/debacle, the staff has an informal 
meeting. The general consensus is that the corps must never per¬ 
form that poorly again. We collectively decide to run the next 
day's rehearsal with an approach and pacing that will later be 
described by corps members as "relentless." 

As the SCV convoy heads off into the dark Kentucky night, the 
drum staff stays awake and tries to brainstorm a new ending to the 
drum solo. We are officially out of ideas. We have tried every¬ 
thing; nothing seems to work. Eventually, at 3:00 A.M., I suggest 
the concept of ending the solo by "drumming slow." So slow, in 
fact, that the drum line will actually be playing and marching in 
slow motion. Maybe it's a brilliant idea. Maybe I'm just only able 
to think in slow motion by this point. We'll see. 

Scene 8 
The Preview 

[Music: "Stand" by REM] It is the DCI "Preview Of 
Champions," and after weeks of intense rehearsal SCV is finally 
starting to perform consistently well. We are relatively close to the 
Missouri home of one of our snare drummers, and his parents and 


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friends can hardly wait until the corps arrives at the stadium. 

Suddenly, three sparkling white-and-silver buses (license plates 
SCV 1, SCV 2, and SCV 3) roll into the parking lot in a tight for¬ 
mation. As the imposing vehicles near a group of fans, it becomes 
noticeable that all of the green curtains of the side windows are 
closed. The message of the time-honored SCV tradition of closing 
the curtains before the buses roll into a show site is subtle, but 
clear: "Attention everyone! The Corps has arrived!" The convoy 
comes to a halt, and very determined corps members spill out into 
the parking lot. 

At precisely this moment, our local snare drummer realizes that 
his uniform is sitting on a hanger back at the high school where we 
spent the night—a one-hour drive from our present location at the 
stadium. This situation is unfortunate but not surprising, since it 
seems to have become the standard operating procedure of our 
snare line this season. There have only been a few times when all 
six of them have arrived to a warm-up with all of the equipment 
and/or uniform parts needed for a show. Interestingly, it is usually 
a different snare drummer each time who leaves something back at 
the truck, on the bus, or at the school. 

Eventually the corps enters the gate and passes in front of our 
competitors (with a snare drummer being hastily put into a uniform 
by support staff as he marches onto the field). The drum line then 
proceeds to have one of their first really great shows of the season. 
Although they performed well, after the show we half-jokingly 
present our inexperienced snare line with a pre-show checklist 
written on the erasable board on the side of the SCV food truck. It 
includes such items as drumsticks, drum, tunic, pants, aussie, 
socks...and brain. 

Scene 9 

DCI Individual And Ensemble Competition 

[Music: A suspended cymbal roll played behind you, with 
stealth] There are several memorable individual and ensemble per¬ 
formances from the corps, especially from our now-magnificent pit 
and bass line. But none is more symbolic of the 1993 season than 
our cymbal ensemble. Until four days ago, there was no SCV cym¬ 


bal ensemble. It was on that day that rookie/age-out Anthony 
Aranda publicly announced that he would become the cymbal 
ensemble if the corps would not field one, since this was his one 
and only chance to march with the Vanguard. The cymbal line ral¬ 
lied to his challenge, and arranger Robert Chavera hastily but inge¬ 
niously put together their ensemble piece. 

It is now the afternoon of the DCI individual and ensemble com¬ 
petition. Robert deploys the members of the street-clothed SCV 
cymbal line to various locations around the concert hall. They 
enter with stealth, and are soon sitting in seats or standing among 
the crowd. They remain unnoticed and are effectively disguised as 
audience members. The only one actually wearing a Vanguard uni¬ 
form is Anthony, and he proudly takes his place on center stage. 
The judges and audience alike are initially confused by the fact 
that our "ensemble" has only one member. 

After the signal to begin, Anthony starts to make the soft, scrap¬ 
ing cymbal sound known by SCV as a "whale call." Suddenly, the 
vast hall comes to life with the sound of cymbal rolls, wind 
chimes, and various other effects swirling around the room, from 
within the audience itself. The stealth ensemble eventually con¬ 
cludes with Anthony actually drinking out of the bizarre percus¬ 
sion instrument known as a waterphone (which is not played with 
water). 

Although our sneaky cymbal players do not win, they do contin¬ 
ue the SCV tradition of cymbal ensemble innovation. (And the 
conceptual limitations of the DCI ensemble competition are 
changed forever.) The standing ovation lasts for several minutes. 

Scene 10 
DCI Prelims 

[Music: "Smells Like Teen Spirit" by Nirvana] It is the morning 
of "prelims" at the DCI World Championships in Jackson, 
Mississippi, and the corps has begun its next-to-last rehearsal 
block of the season. Over the past fourteen days we have seen an 
unbelievable rate of improvement from the entire corps. Despite 
oppressive heat and the fact that many corps members are sick or 
injured, the kids continue to rehearse without any visible letup 









in intensity. 

The drum line does seem somewhat nervous, although they are 
playing extremely well and continue to draw strength and resolve 
from veterans like tenor player Mike Apodaca. This is Mike's age- 
out year, and he refuses to sit out of rehearsals—despite having 
knees so badly injured that he must be helped from the field after 
run-throughs. The entire staff is amazed by the determination and 
resilience of the corps. After rehearsal, we decide that the plan for 
tonight's performance will be for the drum line to have fun and to 
be as relaxed as possible. 

To implement our plan, several staff members explore a local 
mall in search of proper attire for the show. Our mission is to find 
a clothing ensemble that will help the drum line relax and, hopeful¬ 
ly, have a great performance. Eventually we decide on black plas¬ 
tic glasses with "holographic female eyes," and white T-shirts that 
read: "Thank you for not projectile vomiting." 

Surrounded by a large group of fans with cameras and tape 
recorders (and a drum staff run amok), the drum line has the clean¬ 
est, most confident, and most fun warm-up of the entire season. A 
very relaxed SCV percussion battery marches down the ramp and 
takes the field for their prelims performance. 

Scene 11 

And Then Something Magical Happened 

[Music: "1993 DCI Championship Program" by SCV] The 
announcer's voice rings out: "Santa Clara Vanguard, you may 
enter the field for preliminary competition." The corps stands at 
attention as fans, family, and staff members yell encouragement. 
Suddenly, the drum major begins to count off, and the field comes 
alive. As the spread-out drum line begins the eerie musical intro¬ 
duction, they seem to have found something inside themselves not 
seen all season. They begin to play and march with an aura of 
extreme confidence. The battery comes together in the middle of 
the field, and charges directly into what will be later described by 
many of them as the greatest performance of their lives. The pit's 
performance is equally stunning, as they execute their very musical 
book at an emotional level we did not think possible. 

Finally, it's time for the drum solo. The drum line does not sim¬ 
ply play their solo—they attack it. From the looks on their faces 
it's clear that we are witnessing something incredible. The house is 
officially coming down tonight. 

The middle of the solo has been written to give each individual 
section of the drum line a chance to shine, through the use of a 
"feature lick." One after another, each section plays their feature to 
absolute perfection. A "stick on stick" snare lick is one of the last 
to be played, and the snare line nails it—directly in the face of the 
field percussion judge. It appears that the drum line has not only 
taken command of their instruments, but for approximately eleven 
minutes, they have taken command of Jackson, Mississippi. 

The solo ends with my recently added "slow-motion" sequence. 
The crowd is mesmerized as snares, tenors, and cymbals begin to 
move as if in a time warp. This is set to a musical backdrop of 
lightning-fast 32nd-note runs played by the bass line. Then, sud¬ 
denly, all sound comes to an abrupt halt. After a millisecond of 
silence...KABOOM! The entire drum line hits a cannon-level 
rimshot as the horn line comes back in with the loud chords of the 
closing tune. Crowd members near the field are going absolutely 
berserk. So is the field percussion judge. 


It is official. There was absolute magic on the field tonight. As 
the SCV drum line marches out through the tunnel, they look at 
one another in astonishment. We on the drum staff do the same. 
The SCV drum line has just had their "golden show"; there is no 
other way to describe it. 

Scene 12 

The Post-Performance Pandemonium 

[Music: "These Are The Days" by 10,000 Maniacs] As we wait 
in the parking lot for our staff bus to leave for the school where 
we'll sleep tonight, corps director Dr. Len Kruszecki walks up 
with a judge's recap sheet, and announces that we have won field 
percussion for the prelim competition. 

Stunned silence...followed by random yelling and jumping 
around. Touchdown SCV! The corps goes crazy—which is under¬ 
standable, considering that the reaction that empts from the staff is 
nothing less than total euphoric chaos. The next six hours of the 
evening following prelims rank among the happiest and most out- 
of-control moments of my entire life. 

Eventually a large contingency of the staff returns with cat-like 
stealth to our "zone" at the school, sometime before the morning 
sun begins to appear over the Mississippi forest. God bless 
America! 

Scene 13 

The Talk Under The Tree 

[Music: "One" by U2] It is the morning of DCI finals. 
Percussion caption head Scott Johnson gathers the dmm line and 
staff under a large tree near the practice field. We are all still in a 
state of disbelief from the fantastic events of prelims and the 
effects of the post-performance pandemonium. As Scott begins to 
give an emotional summary of the season, and to congratulate 
everyone on their achievement, the entire dmm line begins to cry 
(followed quickly by the staff). 

Everyone then has a few seconds to express his or her feelings 
towards the season—and towards one another. But most are too 
choked up to say more than a few tearful words. It doesn't matter. 
The dmm line and the drum staff are both thinking the same thing: 
We have already succeeded. The final score or placement that the 
corps will receive in tonight's finals is irrelevant. No one can ever 
take this moment away. What started as a rag-tag, blue-light-spe¬ 
cial group of percussion rejects has miraculously transformed. 
Those rejects have become the Santa Clara Vanguard. 

Closing Narration 

[Music: Reprise of Aaron Copland's "Fanfare For The Common 
Man," played quietly and hymnally at first, then swelling] In all 
my years of drum corps I have never seen a group of kids who had 
so little experience, went through so much adversity, and cared 
about and believed in one another as much as the 1993 Santa Clara 
Vanguard. Although they never received the trophies or accolades 
of the many great SCV corps before or after them, on one hot 
August night in Mississippi, those kids showed the world what is 
possible when you refuse to surrender to adversity. 

And that, my friends, is what drum corps is all about. 

Drum corps enthusiasts may contact Lee Rudnicki at 
drumlaw80@aol com. 


JULY 




rcurie 



Strokes 

with Different 

Folks 

by Robin Tolleson 


rince 


H rairie Prince is not-so-qui- 
etly putting together a 
Career every bit as color¬ 
ful as his name. His first big break 
in music came when his renegade 
art-rock group The Tubes became 
an underground success in the 
late 1970s. Since the heyday of 
"Mondo Bondage," Prairie has 
built an impressive list of studio 
and touring credits as drummer 
with Jefferson Starship, Todd 
Rundgren, XTC, Jerry Harrison, 
Neal Schon, Dick Dale, and others, 
as well as developing a thriving art 
business. Cotton/Prince Designs 
masterminds and builds stage sets 
for the likes of Shania Twain, 
Kitaro, Bonnie Raitt, and Robert 
Plant. When Prince isn't laying 
down a thick groove, he's most 
likely tripping over hundreds of 
yards of brightly colored cloth at 
an often-frantic San Francisco 
industrial park warehouse. 






















of Prairie's first memories is the sound of his mom's 
washing machine in Phoenix, Arizona, in 1953. "It 
had that great pulse, that great rhythm," he recalls. 
"My mother said that I showed a lot of rhythm at the 
age of three. I really remember that big white washing machine, and my little 
hand smacking the side, playing along with the rhythm of the machine. It 
sounded like a big bass drum, actually. 

Prince's sisters soon brought him a pair of bongos from Mexico, which he 
played until they were worn out. "During 'show and tell' in the second grade I 
performed along with a record called The Voodoo Suite, and got a rousing 
round of applause. That was my introduction to show business," he deadpans. 



Prince's sisters were big fans of Elvis and 
Buddy Holly, so Prairie heard a lot of that 
early rockabilly drumming. "Early jazz- 
influenced rock drumming," he calls it. "I 
didn't have a set of drums yet, but I got a 
good feeling for my early rock roots, and 
then early soul and funk, from my sisters. 
When Dick Dale's 'Miserlou' came out in 
the early '60s, I was just floored by that 
sound. I would put on my record player in 
my bedroom and play along to Dick Dale 
and The Ventures on my 12" Ludwig blue 
sparkle snare, picking the drum parts out 
of those records. I started adding to my 
set, first with a hi-hat and then a bass 
drum. I was inspired by Stevie Wonder 
and I played along with "Fingertips" on 
my bongos. It was a big inspiration. I 
remember seeing The Beatles on Ed 
Sullivan and being floored by that. All my 
drummer friends in high school started 
getting sets of drums, so I mowed lawns 
and bought an early '60s champagne 
sparkle Slingerland set." 

Prairie started playing in surf bands and 
rock bands in high school, and in his 
sophomore year he met guitarist Roger 
Steen. "We were seriously into The 
Rolling Stones and The Beatles," Prince 
says. "Cream—Ginger Baker obviously 
was taking me to a whole other level— 
and Mitch Mitchell from Jimi Hendrix. 
John Bonham, and Charlie Watts of 
course. I got to see all of them live. I saw 
the Stones in '66 when they played their 


first tour of the United States. James 
Brown opened for them. I was completely 
into the groove that Clyde Stubblefield 
and JB's other drummers had. Frank 
Zappa was a big inspiration, as were all 
his drummers. Then there was Captain 
Beefheart, and his drummer, John French. 
Beefheart was a big influence. I loved his 
eclectic style, adapting jazz and avant- 
garde improvisational kinds of things." 
Prince also heard Art Blakey and Gene 
Krupa records around his house while 
growing up, thanks to his father, who was 
an amateur jazz drummer. 

Prince was awarded a scholarship to the 
San Francisco Art Institute, and he, singer 
Fee Waybill, and guitarist Steen moved to 
the Bay Area. Soon the three would start 
the wildly extravagant rock troupe The 
Tubes, bringing in members of another 
band called The Beans. "We started get¬ 
ting into a theatrical type of music," 
Prairie explains. "We were good friends 
with Alice Cooper while growing up in 
Phoenix, so we were on a competitive 
level as far as seeing who could upstage 
the other guy." The Tubes played hard- 
edged material like "White Punks On 
Dope," and Prairie was also tapping the 
new wave energy of the day. "Stewart 
Copeland's drumming was so urgent. I 
had just seen Bob Marley & The Wailers 
and had been exposed to reggae music, 
and I loved it. But I didn't really under¬ 
stand where they put the bass drum. When 


I heard Stewart playing the hard new- 
wave rock with that kind of approach on 
drums—reggae beats on the drums—I 
thought that was really fantastic. Then I 
was inspired by Jeff Porcaro and a lot of 
the early Steely Dan stuff. I started to get 
into the funk of that music." 

Another big influence on Prairie in the 
70s was Billy Cobham's playing on 
Mahavishnu Orchestra's Inner Mounting 
Flame. "After seeing them, it was just 
like, well, now we've got to start playing 
like that," he sighs. "Or try. So everything 
I played had a little bit of a Billy Cobham 
influence. I was trying to put Charlie 
Watts with Billy Cobham, with a little bit 
of Dick Dale in there. You hear kind of a 
wild, eclectic madman on drums on some 
of the early Tubes records. On The Tubes 
material I was feeling all these things— 
Mitch Mitchell, Ginger Baker, Charlie 
Watts, Billy Cobham, all these cats inspir¬ 
ing me." 

Later Tubes work like "She's A 
Beauty," with producer David Foster, 
shows off Prince's ability to play a disci¬ 
plined funk part well. "David felt that he 
could pull out the funk in us," says 
Prairie. "But he didn't want to step on the 
wild abandon side of the band that had a 
lot of improvisational feels to it. It was 
funny to watch him work. He'd say, 'That 
was just too, too much,' and try to pull it 
in. On two or three tunes that he thought 
had potential to be hit singles he would 
pull the reins in. But then he would let us 
go out on other songs, on the B-sides." 

Todd Rundgren produced the band's 
Remote Control album in 1979, then came 
back to follow Foster with The Love 
Bomb in 1985. It was the group's last 
major-label release. "We got thrown off 
our label after we did The Love Bomb" 
laughs Prairie, "because it was so arty. 
We programmed one whole side of the LP 
on a Fairlight, and I played along to a 
recorded track of percussion. They do that 
all the time now, but it seemed fairly 



JOEHN pftUMME* julv 






innovative at the time. He made me do the 
entire performance as a performance, and 
would not let me punch in. It was like 
nineteen minutes, and I did it. It was ruth¬ 
less. It took two or three days. To this day 
I'm very proud of that." 

Prairie worked on Rundgren's live 
record Second Wind in 1991, with Todd 
conducting a twelve-piece band. "That 
was an interesting process. We recorded 
live in front of an audience for five nights. 
Todd's instructions were, 'Don't pay 
attention to the audience, pay attention to 
me. Act like there's no audience there.' I 
thought we did it live to be inspired by a 
live audience, but he told the audience not 
to clap, which I thought was a little odd. If 
we made a mistake, and he heard it, or if it 
was really a big blunder, we'd stop and 
start over. We also each had a little score- 
card to score our performances, from 
lousy to good to evil to god-like. Of 
course I just marked 'god-like' on the first 
night and left them like that," Prairie 
laughs. "But that was a technique that he 
thought would be good when he ended up 
mixing the stuff. He'd just look down the 
list and see if anybody matched up in the 
god-like category. It was a fine record, 
and it was a great album to tour with 
because we had the big band and real 
intricate parts. It was like being in a Frank 
Zappa orchestra or something." 

Rundgren was asked to do a greatest 
hits record last year, and decided to re¬ 
record the songs in a different genre than 
he did the first time. He picked bossa 
nova. "We did a whole album of his 
hits—'Hello, It's Me,' 'Can We Still Be 
Friends,' 'I Saw The Light'—all in bossa 
nova style," says Prairie. "It's called Todd 
Rundgren With A Twist. We toured that 
last year. I built a giant set that looks like 
a Tiki bar. We invited audience members 
to come up and sit at the little tables and 
be served drinks by the monitor guy, who 
was dressed like a bartender. We were 
supposed to be like a cheesy lounge act 


playing at a cheesy little Tiki bar. We 
were not supposed to pay attention to the 
real audience. We were supposed to pay 
attention only to the audience that was 
brought up on stage." 

Prairie has seen many trends in drum 
sounds, and comments, "In the mid-'70s 


the thinking was to dampen the drum as 
much as possible and then add as much 
reverb and ambience as you could in the 
mix—which strikes me as just so weird. 
Now we use the thinnest heads, the 
biggest dmms, the least padding, and the 
most room mic's possible in order to get 


MODERN DRUMMER JULY 1999 








A masked Prairie in his Tubes period... 


...and today 


that gigantic sound that we are working 
with today. The drum sounds of the millen¬ 
nium." 

Prince's recent work with producer Jerry 
Harrison (including Bijou Phillips' I'd 
Rather Eat Glass) has produced some great 


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drum sounds. "We've been doing a lot of 
really open miking, getting some gigantic 
kinds of sounds, and piecing parts together 
with Pro Tools software. Recording with 
Pro Tools is a whole article in itself, as 
opposed to the old school of going for one 
take, trying to get it all in one performance. 
In a sense it's fine, as long as they can keep 
some of your feel there. There are many 
options that are available now. 

"It's totally amazing," Prairie continues. 
"The thing is, in my life I have lots of dif¬ 
ferent varieties and techniques and ways of 
working. So I don't get too tired of it. I've 
been doing a lot of stuff lately that's com¬ 
pletely improvisational. One take and 
that's it. So I get my balance." 

Recently, Prairie performed two nights 
with Grateful Dead bassist Phil Lesh at the 
Fillmore in San Francisco for an upcoming 
CD release titled Phil And Friends. "I was 
always sort of a fan of The Grateful Dead, 
but I never really picked the bass out and 
listened to it. To actually play with the guy 
was really amazing. He's jazz-influenced, 
real improvisational. You could just stop 
playing, or play a completely different feel 
to what he's playing, and he'll pretty much 
turn you around in different directions. 
Really surprising. It was great. So that's 
like the opposite of playing with Pro Tools. 
You can just open up and play anything 
you want, and have people really enjoy it." 

Another of Prince's "live" outlets is 
Jefferson Starship, featuring Paul Kantner, 


Marty Balin, and Jack Casady from the 
original Jefferson Airplane. They've been 
playing since 1992 in that format, with lead 
singer Diana Mangano singing the Grace 
Slick songs and parts, along with Slick 
Aguilar on guitar, and keyboard player 
Chris Smith. They just released a CD on 
CMC Records called Windows Of Heaven. 
"I'm on that bigger than ever," says Prairie. 
"It's all new material—Marty Balin and 
Paul Kantner songs basically—and there's 
one song on there with Grace Slick." 

Prairie has also done three albums with 
surf guitar hero Dick Dale. "Dick was 
completely improvisational. He would just 
go out," the drummer recalls. "But he has a 
great 'mouth-drumming' style. He can tell 
you how to play your whole part just by 
singing it." Prince also plays in Vince 
Welnick's Missing Man Formation, with 
bassist Bobby Vega. "I can fall over, and 
Bobby will be right there," he quips. 
Prairie is emphatic about the importance of 
the drummer/bassist combination. "It 
makes the drummer, I think, in recordings 
and in live performances. To be able to 
play with a great bass player is like having 
your left foot working as well as your right 
foot. Lately I've been inspired a lot by 
Rick Anderson in The Tubes. Rick's play¬ 
ing is great." 

Noting his busy schedule, Prince contin¬ 
ues, "Trey Sabbatelli subs for me in 
Starship, The Tubes, and Vince's band. We 
work back and forth. That's how we can 




MODERN DRUMMER JULY 1999 


















play with two or three different people at 
the same time. If there are conflicting 
tours, we switch off. It's a great way to do 
it. He's a terrific drummer. We pick up 
styles from each other, and inspire each 
other a lot." 

Prairie has had two memorable experi¬ 
ences working with the band XTC. He first 
played on the group's Skylarking album in 
1987, and he was asked back to work on 
this year's long-awaited Apple Venus, 
Volume One. "When I met them, we imme¬ 
diately clicked, especially Andy Partridge 
and I," says Prince. "At the time of 
Skylarking he was very open, and he didn't 
have as many ideas as he did on this last 
record. I was able to open up a little more. 
But they had such a long time to work on 
the new record that I just did with them— 
they were boycotting their record compa¬ 
ny—that I think he got a little bit locked 
into parts that he'd written on his drum 
machine. Andy's like a drummer. He's 
really adept at incredible rhythms, and he 
has great ideas. I have to give him all the 
credit for the drum parts, but I did perform 
them. 'The Green Man' had a nice, 
Middle-Eastern flavor to the groove. On 


'Harvest Festival' I overdubbed a military 
snare drum part about ten times. On a song 
called 'I Like That,' they had me play the 
whole pattern on my knees with my hands. 
It gives it kind of a flamenco flavor." 

XTC recorded in a studio that was for¬ 
merly a boys' school in England, and 
Prince spent a month working on some 
twenty drum tracks. He was supplied with 
drums by Yamaha and cymbals by Paiste, 
but he brought the snare drum that he had 
used on Skylarking. "In some peoples' 
minds it's one of their favorite snare 
sounds," Prince says. "It's a 1929 brass 
Ludwig 5 1/2"xl4 that I got from a guy 
named Charlie Donnelly in Hartford, 
Connecticut. It's my favorite snare drum. 
Even though I endorse Yamaha drums, I 
use this snare drum a lot for kind of a sig¬ 
nature sound. 

"Everyone's always asking Andy if XTC 
is ever going to play live again—including 
me," Prince teases. "And Andy said, 'Well, 
it might be possible.' I said, 'Keep me in 
mind.' Who knows, maybe after the album 
comes out we'll do a tour of some kind. I'd 
love to do that. That was an incredible pro¬ 
ject to be involved in. Working with their 


bass player, Colin Moulding, is almost like 
playing with Paul McCartney. He's really 
melodic. He plays an entire song within a 
song on bass. You just have to fit around 
him. 

"Colin produced his songs and Andy 
produced his," adds Prairie, "and they had 
different approaches to directing. Colin 
would put down a scratch bass track and 
then have me play along with it. They were 
trying to get a live feel, as much as they 
were trying to get the perfect drum track 
out of me. That's the case in a lot of situa¬ 
tions these days. It's a little frustrating, 
because you want to be inspired by the 
people you're playing with. That's some¬ 
thing that's been lost a bit, with all of the 
programming and mixing tools that are 
accessible in the studio these days. I think 
that there's a little more to music than that. 

"I still think about Mitch Mitchell when¬ 
ever I sit down and play," Prince says, 
smiling. "I think about Mitch, I think about 
Ringo, I think about Ginger Baker. 
Whenever I get too far away, getting too 
funky or whatever, I try to pull myself back 
into some of my earlier influences." 



MODERN DRUMMER JULY 1999 


















BBiSoloisT 


Roy Haynes: "Matrix" 


Transcribed by Ted Moore 



T his month's Drum Soloist features a composition from Chick Corea's classic 1968 
release, Now He Sings, Now He Sobs. "Matrix," the lead-off track, is a burning 
up-tempo piece that showcases yet another inspiring performance by master 
drummer Roy Haynes. His twelve-bar breaks here are slippery yet full of pep, and 
offer a few inventive left turns. It's that "snap crackle" magic of Roy's that makes so 
much of his work exciting and fresh. (The solo begins at the 4:37 mark of the tune.) 



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MODE RN DR U ViMER JULY 1999 















































































































IKaPerspectives 


Rocking Solid 

by Jay Schellen 


I n the ten or more years I've spent teaching, 
no single question has surfaced more often 
from my students than "What can I do to 
improve my timekeeping?" In addition to get¬ 
ting your hands on a metronome, working on 
your hi-hat technique cannot be overempha¬ 
sized in regards to strengthening your time. 

The ability to keep time in 8th notes, quarter notes, or even half 
notes with your hi-hat while you play beats and fills makes it 
effortless to stay in time. The "rocking motion" is a simple tech¬ 
nique to keep your hi-hat foot in motion and in time. The "rock" is 
a toe-to-heel motion that rocks smoothly back and forth. Since the 
heel or the toe is constantly in contact with the pedal, it's easy to 
keep your balance, giving you a "solid seat." This motion may 
take a little getting used to, but if you stick to it, you'll find your¬ 
self playing at a new level of confidence and authority. Try this 
motion on the hi-hat before moving on to the following exercises. 

Now that you have an idea of how the rocking motion feels, 
perform each of the following exercises thirty times. Allow your¬ 
self to fully absorb the feel of each one. Try to memorize the beats 
as soon as possible so that you can play them with authority. 
Some "coordinations" may come easier than others. If one is 
throwing you, slow it down until it comes together. Then slowly 
speed up your tempo. Remember, speed kills if you're out of con¬ 
trol. Above all, relax, and have fun! 

Quarter-Note Pulse 

In these exercises the foot motion consists of the toe pressing 
down on the quarters, and then the heel on the "&s" (indicated by 
a diamond-shaped symbol). 


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MODERN DRUMMER JULY 1999 

















































































































IjHIlkWil 


Workshop 


Basic Training, Parti 

by John Riley 



W hy practice technique? The simple answer is to gain more 
control of our instrument. A more driving reason is our 
realization that just about every innovator in any field of 
endeavor, from Michael Jordan to Vinnie Colaiuta, has possessed 
not only superb technical command, but superior and innovative 
"moves." Superior and innovative moves are impossible without 
strong fundamentals. 

The technical foundation for great drumming is formed at the 
snare drum. In my travels I've noticed that many younger players 
concentrate exclusively on playing the kit, and don't realize that 
time spent honing the basic motions on the snare dmm or a pad 
will pay big dividends at the drumset. To gain control, relaxation, 
efficiency, endurance, power, speed, and good time, one must 
focus on the hands alone and do repetitive drills correctly. Like 
the TV fitness guru says, "If getting in shape were easy, then 
everyone would be in shape." If playing the drums were easy.... 


The exercise below is designed to help you gain more control of 
your hands. The idea is to repeat each one-measure paradiddle 
phrase at a relaxed tempo. Play the unaccented notes "low," and 
use height, not tension, to generate the accents. In order to make 
the accents "pop" out, you must read ahead and prepare the cor¬ 
rect stick heights. 

Before you do the paradiddles, try the two warm-up exercises, 
which go through the cycle of basic stroke moves: the full stroke, 
which starts and finishes high and is played when you have an 
accent followed by another accent with the same hand; the down 
stroke, which starts high and finishes low to create the desired 
accent and to finish in the most efficient position to play the next 
soft note; the up stroke, which starts low and finishes high to pre¬ 
pare for the next accent; and the tap, which starts and finishes low 
and is used for consecutive soft notes by the same hand. 


Warm-Up Exercises 

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MODERN DRUMMER JULY 199? 

















































































The correct moves for the first paradiddle measure are: The first 
loud right is a down stroke because the next right is a soft note on 
beat 2. The next note, a soft left, is an up stroke because the next 
left is a loud note on beat 3. The next note, a soft right, is a tap. 
Then the following note is another tap. The note on beat 3 is a 
loud left down stroke (the left hand should already be in the 


"high" position). The next right is soft going to loud—an up 
stroke. The last two lefts are taps. 

Once you're familiar with this approach, practice the exercise 
by playing each measure four times, then continue down the page. 
A good starting tempo is quarter note = 50, but the sky's the limit. 
Just be sure that you maintain control. 



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I realize that this kind of choreography is pretty awkward at 
first, but the resulting gain in control and consistency of sound is 
worth the effort. In time these motions become second-nature and 
lead to increased speed, relaxation, and clarity. For more informa¬ 
tion on the concept, check out Joe Morello's video The Natural 
Approach To Technique and Gary Chaffee's book Rhythm And 


Meter, Volume 1. 

Next time we'll dig a little deeper into snare drum fundamen¬ 
tals. Until then, remember that practicing in a slow, relaxed fash¬ 
ion while concentrating on maintaining perfect "form" is much 
more beneficial in the long run than recklessly muscling it out. 
Good luck. 



MODERN DRUMMER JULY 1999 














































































































































































































KflffiTechnique 



Study In Paradddles 

by Joe Morello 

Transcribed by Jim Jacobus 



W hen I studied Charlie Wilcoxon's Rudimental Swing Solos 
For The Advanced Drummer as a young boy with my first 
teacher, Joe Sefcick, I thought it was a terrific book, and I 
spent many hours "shedding" the exercises in it. Some years later I 
was fortunate to meet Charlie Wilcoxon while working at a club in 
Cleveland with Marian McPartland. I was very happy to be able to 
tell him in person how much I enjoyed his book. 

While preparing to play at a jazz festival in Canada recently, I 
ran through some of the paradiddle exercises in Wilcoxon's won¬ 
derful book. It occurred to me to put a slightly different "spin" on 
them by playing a flam on every accent. I was very pleased with 
myself, thinking this was a great, original idea, when one of my 
students pointed out that Wilcoxon himself suggested doing this in 
a footnote at the bottom of the page! Needless to say, I was some¬ 
what shocked that I had never noticed it; maybe you didn't either! 

Anyway, I thought it might be interesting to present these exer¬ 
cises here for your practicing enjoyment. I think you'll find the 
practice worth the effort, no matter what kind of music you play. 

Start slowly, with the quarter note between 120 and 135 bpm. 
Increase your speed gradually as you feel more comfortable. For 
variation, try playing with each hand on a different drum or cym¬ 
bal. Have fun with these! 




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MODERN DRUMMER JULY 1999 

























































































































































THE VIEW FROM BERKIEE OPENS 





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ESBRleof 


J 




Where'd It Come From And What's It Doing On My Radio? 


by Daniel Glass 




F or most folks under the age of forty, the 
term "swing" has traditionally brought to 
mind murky images of WWII, black & white 
movies, and guys playing clarinet—certainly not much 
inspiration for the hep youth of today, right? Guess again. Unless 
you've been living under a 28" Leedy & Ludwig bass drum for the 
last year, you can't escape the fact that swing is back and is being 
touted as the hottest new lifestyle revolution since punk rock or 
rap. "Neo-swing" bands are all over pop radio and MTV, and if 
you want to be hip, you'd better add a gabardine suit, some two- 
tone spectators, and a few Lindy-hop steps to your repertoire. 

With all the media exposure (including the cover story of the 
December '98 issue of MD), many drummers must be wondering 
how this phenomenon appeared so quickly and why so many play¬ 
ers have retired the old "boom-splat-boom-boom-splat" in favor of 
"spang-spang-alang." In fact, the swing resurgence has probably 
been somewhat confounding to today's modem drummer. Sure, 
it's just another fad, but the response so far has been extraordi¬ 
nary. Generations of former rockers are scrambling to learn new 
grooves, new sets of chops—indeed, a whole "new" cultural era— 
all within a matter of months. That's a lot to digest, considering 
that the era in question covers a forty-year period of American 
music that was essentially finished by the late 1950s. 

Many of the musicians starting swing bands today are former 
punks or rockers, unschooled in any traditional sense. Many are 
surprisingly young—in high school or college. Green around the 
gills as they may be, these cats are loaded with energy, enthusi¬ 
asm, and a burning desire to understand more about the music. 
"Swingin' In A Modem Age" is designed to address that interest 
and to offer some direction in understanding the origins and influ¬ 
ences of neo-swing. We'll also talk shop: playing techniques, his¬ 
tory, gear tips—all that good stuff. Most importantly, this series is 
intended to allay the worries of those of you who may be daunted 
by the "jazz" origins of the music. Please note: 


r j pG/d 1 ' 


Playing in this style is not something the aver- 
age drummer need feel intimidated by or scared of. 
Swing was the pop music of its day, and even drum¬ 
mers without a ton of jazz training can learn the basics in a 
relatively short amount of time. 

Although it's based in the past, swing music is not an antiquat¬ 
ed piece of history that only your grandparents can appreciate, nor 
is it an abstract museum piece accessible only to an intellectual 
elite. Today's swing musicians (drummers included) are combin¬ 
ing classic swing and jazz with their own musical experience to 
create a new version of the music. They're proving that what 
began in the '30s as an energetic, populist youth movement has 
returned in much the same manner. 

Although mainstream exposure has come only recently, neo¬ 
swing's origins date back to the late 1980s. Most of today's best- 
known outfits were born not from music school lab bands, but out 
of the rebellious sounds of punk, rockabilly, and ska. With their 
focus not so much on virtuosity as on high energy, cool looks, and 
a danceable beat, it's not surprising to see how these kids found an 
ally in classic American music. The older styles (particularly 
rhythm & blues) were naturally appealing because they had a 
stripped-down, powerful groove and provided an alternative to the 
slick, overproduced sound of modern music. Guys like Louis 
Jordan and Louis Prima were just plain cool. They wore super-hip 
threads, sang lyrics about gigolos and fish-fries, and swung like 
mad—definitely a change of pace from metal, rap, and grunge. 

In 1989, Royal Crown Revue combined their love of these styles 
with horn arrangements and a zoot-suited, '40s gangster image. 
The unorthodox sound didn't 
have a name, but something 
new had been born, and people 
went crazy for it. I joined RCR 
in 1994, and during the follow¬ 
ing five-year period we watched 


Original Swing: Gene Krupa 
and his orchestra (top right) 

Neo-Swing: 
Royal Crown Revue 


pwQDLRW DRUMME R JIJLr 1999 













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" ^oday/A. dmmmeAA, crte cosntUtttiuj, 

cloAAic 'LuU+tCf, wtik tkei/i ouui musical e&p&U- 
eMce to create, a ttew oeOAiovi the, **tuAic." 


this so-called "movement" develop from a tiny underground scene 
into a national phenomenon. As recently as two years ago, RCR 
was one of only two or three swing bands touring nationally— 
seven knuckleheads stuffed into an old RV. Since there were virtu¬ 
ally no "swing" venues, we played every kind of bill from heavy 
metal shows to VFW halls. These days it's impossible to keep up 
with all the new bands, and full-time swing clubs abound even in 
smaller towns. 

What's the appeal? Why so much so fast? In the last five years, 
I've met or corresponded with many a tub thumper afflicted with 
the swing bug, and have come to some conclusions about why this 
music and culture have struck a chord with the youth of the '90s. 
The short answer: It's fun, it's an escape, and it rocks. Americans 
are relearning the joys of dressing up, dancing with a partner, and 
digging into the vast treasure troves of their history. Hey, it's even 
okay to play drum solos again. 

So there's a little background. Next month, in "Copying The 
Cats," we'll look at the primary influences of neo-swing drum¬ 
ming. See you then. 


Daniel Glass spends most of his time pounding out the gospel of 
swing with Royal Crown Revue. When not on the road with RCR, 
he lives in Los Angeles with his wife and two cats. 



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MODE R H DRUMMER JU LY 1999 











Celebrate 35 Years of 
Percussion Leadership 


Acquire Your Limited Edition Products* Today! 


LP Music Group is proud to present a very 
special 35th Anniversary Limited Edition 
Series; a collection of five of our most 
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collectibles... classics in their own right. 

These authentic instruments, chosen to 
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leadership, will no longer be produced at the 
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RECORDINGS 


ratingscale 

n 



Bill Bruford's Earthworks A Part, And Yet Apart 


Bill Bruford (dr), Patrick Clahar (sx), Steve Hamilton (kybds), Mark Hodgson (bs) 

urprisingly few drummers have been able to suc¬ 
cessfully maintain solo recording careers. Fewer 
still have been able to create a single work so satisfy¬ 
ing—Compositionally, performance-wise, and sonical- 
ly—as to be acknowledged as a masterpiece. Bill 
Bruford did it once with his brilliant 1979 release, One 
Of A Kind. Well, he's harnessed the magic again for 
his latest, A Part, And Yet Apart. 

A Part shows Bruford fully focused on small-group 
jazz, yet his storied past in progressive music clearly 
seeps through in these pieces, most of which were 
penned by the drummer himself. Here you hear the 
timbres, flow, and temperament of acoustic jazz, but also the twisting odd meters, odd-note 
groupings, and precision of fusion. Imagine Max Roach with an unplugged Mahavishnu— 
sort of. 

This musical combination plays perfectly to Bruford's strengths; his drumming is inspired, 
a fresh blend of composed and of-the-moment playing. There's plenty of "hot shit on the 
drums" (a Bill line), especially on tracks like "No Truce With The Furies," "Footloose And 
Fancy Free," and "Eyes On The Horizon." And when Bill breaks out the brushes, as he does 
on the haunting ballad "Sarah's Still Life," you get caught up in the swirl. 

As for the tones Bill is creating these days, they're all natural—metal and skin, no elec¬ 
tronics. And the sound quality of A Part—especially the drumkit—is spectacular. Just like 
the music here, the drum and cymbal sounds embrace the past yet have a modern sheen. 
(Tama, and especially Paiste, should kiss Bruford's royal butt for the way he makes their 
gear sound.) 

Don't miss this one. It's some of Bruford's best work. (Discipline Global Mobile) 



— William F. Miller 


llOut In Worship Sterilized 

Doug Scharin (dr, perc, kybd). Joe Goldring (gtr. bs, kybd). Julie Lio 
(vln. via), Tony Maimone (bs). Ill Media (turntables). Adheesh Sathaye (tabla). 
Dawn McCarthy (vcl). Phil Spirito (bs) 

With a jackhammer snare 
fill worthy of Bonham, 

Sterilized catches a drum¬ 
mer's ear within the first 
second. In the next second, 
this hint of power and huge 
sound is wiped away in a wash of atmos¬ 
pheric sitar, tabla, and electronic noise. No 
need to worry; the jackhammer beat is to 
return with force. 

What is remarkable about Sterilized is its 
ability to shift between floating dreaminess 
and absolutely cranking drum beats. 
Although there are electronics, loops, sam¬ 
ples, and drum machines used on this CD, 
the live playing and group feel dominate the 
landscape. Drummer Doug Scharin's deep- 
pocket grooves and the group's overall rich 



rhythmic pulse don't aim to get you up and 
dance (although they could). Rather, they 
close your eyes and hypnotize you into sub¬ 
mission. 

The instrumentation, with tabla, violins, 
samplers, highly processed guitars, and even 
a turntable DJ, effectively enable this moodi¬ 
ness. But the playing and imagination of 
Doug Scharin and Out In Worship is yet 
another fine example of what drummers can 
do when given the chance to lead a band. 
This is a gutsy album where the drums are 
up front yet still supporting the overall tex¬ 
ture, and the final impression will leave you 
fascinated. (Perishable, PO Box 57-8804. Chicago, IL 60657-8804, 
www.perishablerecords.com) 

Ted Bonar 


-’latypus When Pus Comes To Shove 

Rod Morgenstein (dr), John Myung (bs), Derek Sherinian (kybd). Ty Tabor (gtr, vd) 

Platypus is one of the most melodic aggrega¬ 
tions in the recent prog rock "musical 



SIGNIFICANT OTHERS 


The expanded re-releases of Stevie 
Ray Vaughan & Double Trouble's 
Texas Flood, Couldn't Stand The 
Weather, Soul To Soul, and In Step 
provide a great 
opportunity 
to revisit the 
contributions 
of drummer 
Chris Layton, 
who pushed 
and prodded some of the most vis¬ 
ceral blues-rock guitar playing ever. 
(Sony Legacy) 

Robert Wyatt fans will rejoice at the 
cool new eps mini box set, which fea¬ 
tures remixes, previously unreleased 
tracks, a CD-ROM promo video of 
"Shipbuilding," and the rare Animals' 
Film soundtrack. (Thirsty Ear) 

Led by drummer/multi-instrumental¬ 
ist Frank Grau, Species Being's 
Yonilicious is a gleefully schizo¬ 
phrenic circus of frenzied percus¬ 
sion, otherworldly voices, and weird 
sound effects that covers territory 
from arty prog-rock to whimsical 
abstract noise. There's nothing else 
quite like it. (Jamaelot Recordings, www.jamae- 
lot.com) 

CPR, which features David Crosby 
and his recently found son, James 
Raymond, have released Live At 
The Wiltern, a double CD recorded 
at that recently renovated Los 
Angeles theater. Drummer Stevie 
Di Stanislao nicely administers a 
varied repertoire, from urbane faux 
Latin grooves to heavy Crosby clas¬ 
sics like "Almost Cut My Hair." 
(www.crosbycpr.com) 

Relentless yet creative pounding by 
Ted Parsons and Ivan Nahem inten¬ 
sify the black beauty of The Swans' 
recently reissued Cop/Young 
God/Greed/Holy Money double-CD 
compilation (Thirsty Ear). 



MODERN DftUMME R JULY } 999 





























chairs" experiments. Featuring excellent 
material written and sung by King's X gui¬ 
tarist/vocalist Ty Tabor, the music here 
could (and should) be heard on commercial 
FM rock stations. Rod Morgenstein (Dixie 
Dregs, Rudess Morgenstein, Winger) long 
ago proved himself to be one of the great 
progressive rock drummers, and here 
blends thick and heavy rock grooves with 
his progressive chops in an exciting new 
style of pop/prog drumming. 

"Standing In Line" kicks things off with 
a driving 4/4 rock groove that crosses over 
odd-time kicks but never loses its solid 
feel. "Nothing To Say" is a Genesis/ 
Beatles-type ballad with a cross-stick 
groove and a half-time power-ballad drum 
sound that's wet and dark. "Rock 
Balls/Destination Unknown" opens with 
Morgenstein providing a solid feel and sim¬ 
ple yet effective drum breaks; later in the 
tune he shows his stuff and stretches out. 
"Platt Opus" again allows Rod to show off 
his signature fusion chops, "I'm With You" 
and "Willie Brown" are straight-ahead FM 
pop/rock tracks, "Blue Plate Special" is a 
total Dregs slow shuffle, and "What About 
The Merch?" is an early Jeff Beck-like 
funky instrumental, where Rod fits tight in 
the pocket. 

Morgenstein displays total musicality 
and control throughout this recording, and 
still manages to fit in some great chops. 
This is the sign of a true professional. Let's 
hope it makes it on the radio. (Velvell 

— Mike Haid 


M Jri Caine Trio Blue Wail 


Ralph Peterson Jr. (dr). Uri Caine (pno), James Genus (ac bs) 


Seamlessly blending the 
light and the dark, the loud 
and the soft, the mellow 
and the energetic, Uri 
Caine's latest group 
bridges the span between 
classic bop and free jazz without adhering to 
the sound of one particular era. Bookended 
by solo piano versions of Fats Waller's 
"Honeysuckle Rose," the nine original com¬ 
positions on Blue Wail contain elements of 
many different jazz idioms—blues forms, 
light "cocktail" tunes, Latin rhythms, wild 
hard-swinging explorations—while still 
inspiring a distinct group sound. And largely 
responsible for the LP's unique, timeless 
feel is the elegant yet down-and-dirty drum¬ 
ming of Ralph Peterson Jr. 



Though he lends beauty to the softer 
material with expressive rolls and graceful 
brush work, Peterson really shines when, 
unleashed on a high-energy tune, slicing 
and dicing the beat while displacing the 
pulse all over his kit. This tireless, muscu¬ 
lar approach recalls Tony Williams without 
rehashing the late master's licks. Rather, 
Peterson's ability to spout frantic flurries of 
forceful strokes punctuated by long strings 
of cymbal crashes showcases his own high¬ 
ly evolved, instantly recognizable style. 
Just check out the Latin-spiced, accompa¬ 
nied solo at the end of "Bones Don't Cry," 
to hear the rolling thunder of an inventive 
drummer at the top of his game. (Allegro/Winter & 
Winter, [SOD] 288-2007, www.allcgro-music.com) 

— Michael Parillo 


I Poster Children New World Record 


Howie Kantoff (dr). Hose Marshack (bs), Rick Valentin (gtr. vcl), Jim Valentin (gtr) 

Sometimes it takes a while 
to get things just right. The 
Illinois band Poster 
Children have worked 
through six drummers in 
their eleven-year history 
before settling in with Howie Kantoff. (Note 
to band: Hang on to this guy.) Built around 
Kantoff s rhythmic hooks, PC's seventh 
album, New World Record, is a drummer's 
groove expo, and the next best thing to 
being there while this great, rolling 'n' tum¬ 
bling guitar-based indie band lays it down. 

Judging from video clips included with 
the CD, Kantoff's kit is somewhat minimal- 
istic, but his creativity is huge. Utilizing the 
whole drumset for every song, he moves 
around with a melodic ease, complementing 
the lead vocal line while letting each drum 
sing its own song. Kantoff isn't shy about 
odd time signatures, either, but despite some 
chrono-weirdness, he is consistently fluid, 
loose, and relaxed. On "Time To Kill," he 
uses a tambourine attached to a hi-hat stand 
for optimum affect, riding with his left foot 
and right hand, serving up sixteenth-note- 
triplet fills throughout. Using only a cowbell 
and a couple of toms on "Mr. Goodnight," 
his tribal beat sounds like some sort of 
Neanderthal marching band roaring through 
the jungle. It's truly the drumming that 
makes these songs so brilliant, and that 
sends you leaping for the volume control— 
and go ahead, turn it way up! It's that cool. 
(spinART) 

— Fran Azzarto and Lisa Crouch 



TAKING THE REINS 


A trio of extraordinary releases by 
some rather "worldly" drummer-led groups. 

The title of The Jeanette Wrate Northern 
Lights Ensemble's Echoes Of A Northern 

■ Sky refers to the drum¬ 
mer's search for her 
Scandinavian roots. 
Brilliant compositions 
and exquisite sound 
quality allow all the 
members of the ensem¬ 
ble to shine. Extended solos emerge from 
clearly stated themes, and Ms. Wrate's 
drumming is crisp, propulsive, and imagina¬ 
tive throughout. Everyone listens and inter¬ 
acts on this date. (Cryptogramophone, [310] 301-1611, 
www.cryptogr3mopbone.com) 

Peter Erskine graciously produced Alex 
Cline's Sparks Fly 
Upward, an album 
equal in grace and 
scope to Wrate's work. 

(The two releases also 
share a record label 
and violinist, Jeff Gauthier.) "Audacity" pays 
homage to the late, great master Tony 
Williams, and Mr. Cline sprints into gear, 
successfully building a "Lifetime" feel. The 
group creates a lot of open space between 
interesting and often eerie sounds. Cline's 
drumset resembles a small city, and at 
times sounds as active and chaotic! 
(Cryptogramopbone) 

Sum And Kali, from The Ray Spiegel 
Ensemble, allows Mr. Spiegel to thoroughly 
strut his tabla, vibra¬ 
phone, and marimba 
chops. A student of Alla 
Rakha and Bobby 
Hutcherson, Spiegel 
combines Asian and 
Western percussion and strings to create 
"meditative grooves." I quickly unearthed 
my copy of Diga Rhythm Band (1977) to 
check out Ray's earlier work. Oh, and Mark 
Johnson's drumming really keeps things 
moving here. (Simla House, PO Box 1229. Woodstock, NY 
12498, www.simlahouse.com) 

— David Licht 




wO&ESiM CHJmmER jULV 










D Grupo Afro BoricuaBombazo 


Hector Matos, Hector Calderon, Luis Cepeda, Angel Mojica 
(perc), Antonio Martinez. Nellie Lebron, Harry R. Diaz, Roberto Cepeda (vcl). 
William Cepeda (conch shell, ton. pno. vcl) 


At any public festivity in 
Puerto Rico you're likely 
to find good food, heated 
dancing, and high spirits 
fueled by plena and 
bomba. The two Puerto 
Rican folkloric music forms feature lively 
drumming, call-and-response vocals, and 
interactive dancing. 

Grupo Afro Boricua teams up master 
drummers and singers to deliver this her¬ 
itage at peak voltage. In their hands, turn- 
of-the-century tradition transcends era, 
delivering millennium-party urgency from 
the first cut to the last. Drummers will also 
enjoy the liner notes that detail indigenous 
percussion instruments. 

William Cepeda, the group's director 
and producer, is a noted jazz trombonist / 
composer/arranger and member of a musi¬ 
cal family dynasty steeped in the preserva¬ 
tion of Puerto Rican folkloric music. His 
exciting concurrent release as a leader, 
Afrorican Jazz—My Roots And Beyond , 
features bomba and plena rhythms weaved 
into a fiery, eclectic contemporary jazz set¬ 
ting. Together, the two vital CDs bookend 
a century of rich tradition. (Blue Jackel, [516] 423- 
7879, www.bluejackel.com) 

— Jeff Potter 



Ecstasy In Numbers Spellbound 

Garey Williams (dr). Dean Schmidt (bs). Mike Mattingly (gtr) 
There is a lesson to be 
learned by listening to the 
solid and dynamic perfor¬ 
mances of this instrumen¬ 
tal electric fusion trio. 

"Ears" is the key word 
here. Each player listens to and comple¬ 
ments the others in a tasteful and respectful 
manner. The arrangements sound tightly 
worked out, but not stiff or predictable. 
And the tones of each instrument are even¬ 
ly matched and well-mixed for a rich and 
full sound. 

Garey Williams displays a beautiful 
touch and emotion in his drumming. He 
performs with a strong technique and a 
keen sense of what to play in a studio situa¬ 
tion to achieve the correct balance within a 
jazz/rock trio setting. His drums sound fat, 
wet, and well recorded. His cymbal work is 
very expressive, and the mix allows his 
drums to explode with power and intensity 
when necessary. The compositions move in 
and out of various grooves in an interesting 




and playful manner, but never lose their 
solid feel. Although each player possesses 
noteworthy chops, the listening experience 
is not drawn so much toward their improvi- 
sational talents as it is toward the musical 
interaction within the material's arrange¬ 
ments. There is not a standout track on the 
disc; they are all outstanding. (Speechless, [509] 
925-3907, www.dnirasetartistry.com) 

— Mike Haid 


VIDEOS 


Cindy Blackman Multiplicity 


level: beginner tn advanced. 60 minutes, $39.95 


Progressive jazzer and 
Lenny Kravitz pop-funk 
groove-maker Cindy 
Blackman's Multiplicity 
features some fine 
acoustic and electric 
jazz blowing inter¬ 
spersed with discus¬ 
sions of her background 
and playing concept, an 
approach that keeps the 
tape interesting and flowing. In addition to 
touching on basics like seat height, foot 
technique, and different grips, Cindy talks 
about and demonstrates different approach¬ 
es to timekeeping in jazz and rock. She 
begins alone, with straight-8th and triplet 
independence exercises, then adds the 
band—who eventually play everything 
from bop and a "brushed" ballad to bashy 
funk, fusion, and laid-back R&B. This 
method provides a free and broad context to 
her ideas. In addition, Blackman plays with 
just an acoustic or electric bassist, to focus 
on that critical interaction, and touches on 
the application of rudiments to the kit. A lot 
of important ground covered by a drummer 
with a lot to offer. (Warner Bros./Rittor Music) 

— Rich Watson 


U T P I IV 

0fU"l 

W-v & \ 

IC* 

/ J 




BOOKS 


IH The Ultimate Drumset Reading 
Anthology For The Working 

Drummer by Steve Houghton 

level: intermediate to advanced, $19.95 (book and CD) 

On The Ultimate Drumset Reading 
Anthology , drummer/author/clinician Steve 
Houghton brilliantly tackles the special 
reading requirements and idiosyncrasies of 


drumming in various formats and settings, 
including big band, small group, 
Broadway, live shows, cruise ships, studio 
work, and dance jobs. 

Each format is illustrated with an aver¬ 
age of six charts written in that idiomatic 
style. For instance, whereas the big band 
section includes actual drum charts by top 
arrangers, the small group section has 
charts and sloppily hand-penned lead 
sheets, all in a variety of musical genres. 
The live show section includes play-ons 
and play-offs, and 
the studio work 
section includes 
charts for a bank 
commercial, car¬ 
toons, TV/radio 
"IDs," and a TV 
sports promo. 

Often Houghton 
includes the kind 
of aggravating 
chart writing pro¬ 
fessional drummers are likely to encounter. 
Fortunately, he also provides general guid¬ 
ance and specific tips for interpreting each 
chart. Similarly helpful is a glossary of 
terms commonly encountered in the vari¬ 
ous types of charts. Most of the charts are 
also performed with a trio on the accompa¬ 
nying CD; some of the tunes are cool, oth¬ 
ers excruciatingly square—again, authen¬ 
ticity is key. Drumming on the disk is 
panned to the left channel so it can be 
turned down or omitted entirely from the 
mix. 

Anthology offers an invaluable leg-up for 
drummers with reading in their future, 
especially in the various forms of studio 
and show music, for which there is pre¬ 
cious little in print to prepare them. (Alfred) 

— Rich Watson 

D Guide To Standardized Drumset 

Notationby Norman Weinberg 

level: beginner to intermediate. $9.95 

By its nature the drumset is not a "stan¬ 
dard" instrument—some are small, others 
contain many more musical parts. With the 
proliferation of instructional books in dif¬ 
ferent genres, it sometimes gets confusing 
trying to interpret the writer's intent. In its 
44 pages, Guide To Standardized Drumset 
Notation shows how to notate just about 
any style of drumset on a five-line staff. 

In order to come up with his framework, 
Weinberg studied over two hundred pub¬ 
lished instructional books, arrangements, 
and compositions involving notated drum- 



MODE R K DRUMMER J U LY 3 999 

















set parts. In his research, Weinberg found a 
number of notational variations and an 
assortment of different noteheads and artic¬ 
ulations. This type of diversity is not what 
drummers or arrangers need to be worrying 
about on the gig, so Weinberg addresses 
modern scoring problems like multiple tom 
setups, multiple crash and ride cymbals, 
drums and cymbals sharing staff positions, 
cowbell and other percussion noteheads, 
rimshot and cross-stick notation, ghost 
strokes, and other topics. Articulations like 
choked cymbals, foot splash on hi-hat, bell 
and edge of cymbal, and center and edge of 
drum are covered, as is the use of different 
beaters. Two-voice drumset music is dis¬ 
cussed, and Weinberg's guide to reading 
and creating a legend is very helpful. 

This book should be required reading, 
not only for drummers aspiring to show or 
studio work, but to composers and 
arrangers seeking to give the clearest 
instructions to, and get the most out of, 
their drummers. (PAS) 

— Robin Tolleson 


Contemporary Rudimental 

Studies & Solos A Guide To Learning 
And Performing Rudiments by Lalo Davila 

level: beginner to intermediate, $29.95 (book 8 2 CDs) plus $3.00 shipping 

Rudiments are the building blocks of 
drumming for both snare drummers and 
drumset players, and this 94-page, spiral- 
bound book & CD package is a useful— 
and fun!—tutorial on that important topic. 

One page here is devoted to each of the 
40 PAS rudiments, complete with proper 
stickings. From five to nine examples of 
each rudiment are written out as exercises 
at different tempos. Following each page of 
rudimental exercises is a one-page solo 
featuring the rudiment, with clearly marked 
stickings, accents, and dynamics. The last 
ten pages of the book are devoted to five 
solos incorporating all the previous rudi¬ 
ments, along with a healthy dose of the 
author's humor. 

The two accompanying CDs are almost as 
good as having a private teacher to go over 
all the written material with you. Davila 
himself narrates, and a performance of at 
least three of the exercises on each page of 



the book are included. Each solo is played 
once with the snare drum part, so that a stu¬ 
dent can hear what it is supposed to sound 
like, and once without the snare drum, but 
with accompaniment so a student can play 
along. Humor eases the lessons: "La Polka 
Loca" is accompanied by an accordion, 
"Don't Answer That!" by barking dogs and 
a gunshot, and "Samba Del 'Boro" by agogo 
bells and synthesized sounds. 

If you've been putting off learning your 
rudiments, Contemporary Rudimental 
Studies And Solos is a great way to put a 
smile on your face and some rudiments in 
your sticks ! (Vision Publications. PO Box 17066 Nashville, TN 37217} 

— Andrea Byrd 



To order any of the videos or books reviewed 
in this month's Critique, 

24 hours a day. 7 days a week, call 

=[kxiks£bw 

at (800) BQQKS-NOW (266-5766) 

or visit us at http://www, booksnow, com 
(Handing charge nnay be odded, 
acco'dmg to prcouct availability.) 


FREE! DISCOUNT DRUM CATALOG 


it 


T” SHIRTS 


$7.50 per shirt 

Certified Check or Money Order Only 
{Includes Shipping) 

Outside US 
$10.00 US Funds 




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‘We will beat any advertised price’ 


ATLANTA 

PRO PERCUSSION, INC. 

2526 Spring Road * Smyrna, GA 30080 
(770) IDO-DRUM (770) 436-3786 
Or call operator for toll free number 

Call or write for our FREE DISCOUNT FLYER 
Call Information for our toll free number 



available now from good record stores 
or by direct mail: price $13.00 

MAIL ORDER GA residents add 8,25% stale safes tax. Postago/Haridling 15% of 
subtotal. $2.5G minimum. Outside U.S. additional postage Canada / Mexico add Si .50 
AllotNsr countries add $7.00 All tvctars outside U.S. musl use registered mall add $4.85 

also available: DGM9705 Bill Brulond with Ralph Towner & Eddie Gotiiejc tf Summer Had Gbpsfs 
DGM 3 ftt *5 Brutond - Levin Upper ExtrwnRtes fprice each: SI 3,0V) 

TOUR DATES MAY 1999 

B/9 Blues Alley, Washington DC; 10 Ram’s Head, Annapolis, MD; 

11 Thealre of the Living Arts, Philadelphia, PA; 12 Iron Horse, Northampton, MA; 
13/14 Knitting Factory, New York, NY; IS Modern Drummer Festival. Montclair 
State University, Upper Montclair, NJ 

© Discipline Global Mobile 

PO BOX 5282. BEVERLY HILLS. CA 90509-5262. USA 

lax: (323) 937 91U2 Order Sne; (323) 937 3194 

email; PpeaPtod^tfacLoom website; vvww.d19ciplne.co, iik 


MODERN DRUMMER JULY 1999 

















BBHstuHio 



Dave Lombardo 

Slaying The Classics 

by Matt Peiken 


D ave Lombardo had never heard of eighteenth-century 
classical composer Antonio Vivaldi when he got one of 
the strangest and most welcome invitations of his life. 
One year later, Lombardo is a renaissance drummer, reborn 
through a series of projects that stretched his creative boundaries 
wider than he could have imagined or planned. 

Safe to say, nobody covered more musical territory in 1998 than 
Lombardo, who first earned acclaim during the '80s as the drum¬ 
mer for metal mavens Slayer. This past summer, Dave went to 
Italy to record with Italian opera singers and classical musicians in 


an experimental tribute to Vivaldi. The result, Vivaldi: The 
Meeting, on Thirsty Ear Records, hit stores this May. Even 
Lombardo admits the project is more notable for its guts than its 
sonic payoff. But for Dave, it sparked other projects that drove 
him deeper into the world of improvisation. 

Back in the US, he joined former Faith No More singer Mike 
Patton in an unclassifiable noise fest called Phantomas. Then 
through Patton he hooked up with New York avant-garde jazz 
artist John Zorn for shows at the Knitting Factory. Lombardo 
returns there in June for a performance with Zom. 




mode R N D RUMME R J U LY ) 999 



















Meanwhile, Dave still has both kick drums steeped in hard 
music. He brought a dash of improvisation to Grip Inc.'s third 
disc, Solidify, and performed all the drum tracks on Testament's 
new record. And when he's back home in Victorville, California, 
Dave toils with an industrial three-piece called Kkleq Muzzil. 
He's also found time to squeeze out an instructional book. 

As Lombardo prepared to hit the road with Grip Inc., he talked 
about his varied projects and how each contributed to his musical 
reawakening. "I really needed 1998, because 1997 was such a 
slump," he says. "I found myself at the end of a Grip Inc. tour, 
asking my manager, 'Any more shows?' And there weren't any. I 
felt like I wasn't working a lot of days, like there was nothing to 
do. I was looking out my back door watching the grass grow. I'm 
never going to let that happen again. I don't feel like doing yard 
work. I want to play." 

MP: I have to say, the Vivaldi project is maybe the strangest pair¬ 
ing of styles I've ever heard. How did you get connected with 
Italian opera? 

DL: I know this guy named Alberto Contini, who owns a label in 
Italy called Thylamus Records. He 
heard I was going to be in the area 
recording the Grip Inc. record, and 
he asked if I wanted to do a certain 
project with him. He explained that 
it had to do with a story written 
about a hundred years ago that was 
about how a meeting between 
Vivaldi and a Cuban percussionist 
changed the course of music. 

It was an experimental thing, and 
I was totally into it. I'm always into 
doing different things, and this was 
more different than anything I 
could have imagined. I'd never 
heard Vivaldi's music before, and I 
didn't know any of the musicians 
I'd be performing with. But we set 
up some days in the studio, and after I finished the Grip record in 
Germany I took an eleven-hour train ride to Milan, Italy to do it. 
MP: Weren't you at all intimidated? It seems so outside your ele¬ 
ment. 

DL: Hell, yeah, I totally felt the pressure. But pretty soon, it felt 
like we were just all in this great experiment together. I got to this 
huge house surrounded by a large fence, like a compound. The 
studio was at one end of the yard, with an apartment on top of it. 
The accommodations were beautiful, and they'd whip up these tra¬ 
ditional Italian meals every day. When it was time to go back to 
work, you didn't feel like it because you were just so stuffed. But 
then a little espresso kicks in and it's time to go again. 

They rented some drums for me, and the director, Lorenzo 
Amiga, would brief us on what we were about to play. He'd tell a 
story behind each song. He'd explain the setting, like the canals in 
Venice, and what was in Vivaldi's mind when he wrote the piece. 
Lorenzo didn't speak much English, if any at all. I speak Spanish, 
and the Italian words—the expressions—are similar, so I was able 
to understand some of it, and I had a translator to help with the 


rest. Everybody else was full-on Italian. 

Anyway, I'd say, "Let me listen to the tempo," and he would 
sing it to me and play the harpsichord to it. It would take a little 
while before I found a bit of a rhythm in there. Then we'd map the 
song out, and I had a little sheet music to guide me through the 
piece—and we did it. But it was mostly improvisation, and they 
pretty much left it up to me to interpret my parts. 

MP: That's really surprising because it sounds much more 
rehearsed than that. All things considered, you sound pretty tight. 
DL: There was a lot of eye contact and a lot of leading each other 
through the music, because we cut it all live—oboe, flute, drums, 
and everybody else. The way I saw it, the organ was like the 
bassline, and the harpsichordist was sort of the rhythm guitarist, 
but I followed the organ's rhythmic patterns on the sheet music, 
and that's what led my changes from part to part. 

I marked off the sections—I had to do that, because this wasn't 
like 4/4 music. If you just try to count out ten bars, it'll mess you 
up. I had to just feel it out. 

MP: How much freedom did you have to be yourself? 

DL: Total freedom. They encouraged me to just be myself. To me, 

it was more like a jam session, and I 
essentially just went in and laid down 
some grooves. I was still very aware 
of the style of music, but there was 
so much spontaneity, I didn't have 
time to worry about playing too hard 
or too much. There's a song on there 
called "La Tempesta D'estate," 
where the flutist, oboe player, and I 
go into a jam session, and that hap¬ 
pened totally spontaneously. 

MP: Since you pretty much crash- 
coursed Vivaldi's music, what was 
your process for interpreting it on the 
drums? 

DL: Well, I had about a month or so 
to picture this whole scenario and to 
prepare myself to be mentally chal¬ 
lenged. But they told me not to listen to the music at all before I 
got there. Once I got there, we only had three days to do the whole 
thing, but we practiced a little bit, too, and we did some punches 
during the recording. 

MP: You get a lot of opportunity to solo—more so than with any 
other recording I've heard from you. 

DL: That was all improvised, too, but it was controlled improvisa¬ 
tion. Any time there were no vocals, we were free to explore 
things musically. I love soloing when it's the right time, but I feel 
it's more important to hold back and let the music breathe. There's 
a lot of natural breath in Vivaldi's music, and I didn't want to 
dominate the whole thing. 

But whether I was soloing or not, you could really hear a differ¬ 
ence in the feel from when I played and when I sat back and let 
the other musicians play. The music definitely got a lot heavier, 
and when I pounded out some rhythms, I could tell most of them 
had never seen drums performed like that before. I played some 
percussion on there, too—shakers and bongos. 

MP: Are you proud of the results? 


"When I listen back to 
Vivaldi: The Meeting, I’m 
like, ’Whoa, I did that!' 

It’s a cool example of 
what musicians can do, 
regardless of their back¬ 
grounds, if they’re given the 
chance to play together." 


WOPFHN : Ul V 1 ?P9 


DL: Yeah, I guess so, but it's definitely weird. When I listen back 
to it, I'm like, "Whoa, I did that?" What I like most about it is that 
it's a cool example of what musicians can do, regardless of their 
backgrounds, if they're given the chance to just play together. We 
all got along, and because we were there for the music, we all 
spoke the same language. 

These days, a lot of metal bands are bringing in orchestral 
sounds. But the way we did it was really intimate. And the whole 
atmosphere was so different from any other time I'd been in the 
studio. Just the personalities of the musicians were so different 
from Grip or Slayer. But there were some similarities, too. It was 
like family. We ate lunches and dinners together on the patio. 
Everybody was happy. It was a joyous thing. It was definitely one 
of the most amazing experiences I've ever had in music. 

MP: It seems like you've had quite a few amazing experiences in 
the past year or so. Tell me about Phantomas. 

DL: Yeah, that's just as experimental, and even more improvisation- 
al. It involves Mike Patton, King Buzzo of The Melvins, and Trevor 
Dunn from Mr. Bungle. I met Mike through Puffy (Mike Bordin), at 
Faith No More's last show, in Hollywood. A couple months later, 
Mike calls me up and asks if I want to do a project with him, and I'm 
like, "Wow, I'm gonna do something with Mike Patton!" 

He told me the project was really weird, but I told him I'm not a 
stranger to strange music. But he sent me the tape, and sure 
enough, it was one of the most mentally demanding—and at times, 
physically demanding—pieces of music I'd ever heard. There 
were thirty songs that ran between thirty seconds to a minute and a 
half each, and each was internally complicated. It was like a demo 


tape that Mike did by himself with a drum machine. But he wanted 
to assemble a live group to do shows and re-record the music, and 
that's where I came in. 

We rehearsed for six days, but those six days were so intense. 
We'd go from about eleven in the morning until about midnight, 
one, or even three the next morning. I tried to play almost every¬ 
thing that Mike had come up with, but I just had to shake my head 
at some of it because I didn't know how in the world I could pull it 
off. There was room for improvising here and there, but there was 
no real time signature to some of it, and no metronome. Some 
songs would have a weird tom pattern with this real fast, choppy 
double bass part beneath it. 

I ended up changing the stuff a little bit. But right from the start, 
I knew where Mike was going with it. He couldn't believe that I 
understood it, but I had to reassure him that, yeah, I knew what he 
was trying to do. Playing this music was almost like watching a 
movie—a lot of peaks and valleys, intense parts and then big emo¬ 
tional dips, then immediately something else—just totally off-the- 
wall. It moves in frames. We ended up doing four shows at Slim's, 
in San Francisco, then making the record. It was a different thing 
in the studio. There are a lot of small parts, but it took us a long 
time to get them down. So after we did the record, we went out on 
a short tour. 

We set up kind of weird, where I was stage right facing Mike 
and the rest of the stage. Trevor and Buzzo were between us. It 
helped with the eye contact, which was really important because 
this music demands total attention. 

MP: So from there, you went from a semi-improvisational format 


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to a completely improvisational performance with John Zorn. 

DL: Yeah. That happened because Mike is friends with John, and 
John was a big influence on Mike. I met John at the Knitting 
Factory when we did a Phantomas show. A couple of months 
later, he called me and asked if I wanted to do a couple of shows. 
Of course, absolutely, I thought it would be great. We did some 
shows at the Knitting Factory in New York City. I had my whole 
kit, minus two toms. 

The first night, there were six musicians, but John wasn't play¬ 
ing with us. Instead he was like the conductor. He laid out all 
these index cards, and each one had a specific word or style writ¬ 
ten on it, like "soft" or "fast." He'd point to maybe three of us and 
have us play to an index card. So I'd maybe start out on a fast 
beat, with no other inspiration or direction, and the other guys 
would follow me. Then he'd point to the other three musicians 
and have them play to another card, and he'd cross-fade us. Then 
he might direct one group to copy what another group was play¬ 
ing, but quieter. 

We did that only one night, but it was just amazing. The 
response was awesome. We did two shows the second night, with 
Zorn, Patton, and me. Mike was doing vocals, but he was doing 
more noises than singing. 

MP: What kind of beats or rhythms were you coming up with? 
DL: I'd start with something funky, which would maybe evolve 
into something heavy. But the changes would occur very gradual¬ 
ly and without any plan. Sometimes I'd get into my double bass, 
and sometimes I wouldn't touch it. Sometimes I would just start 
with a groove on the toms, and then it would grow into something 


I would never have thought of playing if I'd planned it. With 
everything, it was all feel. 

MP: As a drummer, do you have to prepare for or approach 
improvisational music differently than you would in a band such 
as Grip Inc.? 

DL: Definitely. You have to be more conscious of what's going 
on. When you know the music so well, when you're doing that 
same thing every night, you go into what I call "cruise control," 
like when I do a set sometimes and I'm not even there. I'm think¬ 
ing of home or whatever. 

With improvisation, you're a hundred percent there, and you're 
filled with the energy of spontaneous musical expression. I'm so 
into the improv thing now. I love that whatever we do that night, it 
will never be repeated. It can't be. The magic involved in that, the 
feeling among the musicians and the attention and excitement, it's 
indescribable. 

MP: Given the range of work you've done recently, does Grip 
Inc. now feel somewhat restrictive? 

DL: No, because it feeds a different fire. It has a different feel, a 
different atmosphere. I like playing heavy music, that heavy 
sound, with thumping bass and loud guitars, where I can hit really 
hard. That's a whole different animal. 

MP: Does your work on these side projects influence what you 
bring to Grip Inc.? 

DL: Not really, because they're very different things. Grip Inc. is 
more thought-out, more planned. I take time to develop the right 
rhythms and fills, and I don't really change things up too much 
from the record to the live show. 




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But I think I'm more aware of the total sound now, listening for 
what everybody's doing at any point in the song. And compared to 
the past two Grip Inc. records, I think I felt a lot more free to just 
do what I want to do on the drums. I'm listening more to my inspi¬ 
rations, instead of worrying so much about being the kind of 
drummer people expect me to be. 

MP: It's funny you mention that, because I was just about to com¬ 
ment on your tom work. People are so quick to talk about your 
double kick drumming, but I think there's a distinctive style and 
sound to your tom rolls. They always sound like avalanches. 

DL: I'm so happy to hear that. Yeah, I get a little annoyed sometimes 
that people only think of me for fast double bass. I think I'm even 
more creative with my tom fills. I always try to let my rolls breathe. I 
like hearing that rolling motion. No matter how fast or short or long 
they are, I want them to have some momentum. I guess it comes 
from my early days, listening to congas. It's in the fluency, the 
movement of the hands, and I try to bring that to the drumset. 

You mentioned sound, which I think is really important to 
bringing out the most in a roll. You have to hear the resonance of 
the shells. You want to hear that drum breathe. Sometimes I record 
other bands in my home studio, and drummers come in with all 
this tape on the heads or those heads with muffles on them. It 
sounds like they're hitting cardboard boxes. I say, "No, dude, I 
won't record that." I won't record drums that sound like that. But 
they say they don't like the ring, so I teach them how to tune their 
drums, to tune out the ring and bring out more of the shell's reso¬ 
nance. 

MP: These days, though, you can trigger anything. Why shouldn't 


a drummer just hit something that sounds like a box if he or she 
can just trigger a perfect sound? 

DL: Actually, that's a good question. It all comes down to what 
you want to hear and the style of music you're playing. If you can 
trigger the exact sound you want to hear, then great. But I still 
think there's no substitute for the sound of a real drum pushing air 
through a microphone. 

MP: Getting back to the new Grip Inc. record, tell me about the 
inspiration behind "Bug Juice." You rarely hear drum solos on 
rock records these days. 

DL: That song was all about trying to bring the improvisational 
element into Grip Inc. We're always going to be a band that has 
more structure to it, that writes out the songs and rehearses them. 
But I wanted to see if we could express ourselves in a whole dif¬ 
ferent way. What I played was spontaneous, but we had some 
structure with it, too. We wanted three sections—the intro, the per¬ 
cussion part, then the double bass ending. 

MP: How do you think the past year has affected or influenced 
your outlook on music and your career? 

DL: I always liked to think I was open to anything, but I've had 
experiences that have really opened my eyes to the creative possi¬ 
bilities within music. There don't have to be any rales. You just 
need to express yourself. And I'm so happy that people are starting 
to see me as more than a heavy metal drummer. I'm always going 
to have that side of me, but I'm totally open to anything, and I'm 
always ready to learn new things. But I also know that I don't have 
to just wait for things to happen. I can make them happen. aj 



MODERN DRUMMER JULY 1 999 













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by Russ McKinnon 

L ast month we talked about some general ideas to help you 
become a working drummer. Now I'd like to pass along some 
specific tips to assist you in your quest to be a pro player. 
Behold what I modestly refer to as... 

Uncle Russ's Survival Tips 

1. Be qualified. Play and read all styles of music. Try not to 
have a musical Achilles heel. For instance, I know a lot of guys 
who play well but don't know the first thing about brushes. Get 
that together, because it's good for your playing and because you 
never know when someone is going to ask you to play them. (It 
comes up more than you might think.) 


. (A pager will pay for itself with a couple of 
And have a fax machine at home to receive job 


in a timely 
calls for 

on the job, go the extra yard by offering to help in other 
ways r that might make the gig run more smoothly. This will make 
you an even stronger asset to the musical situation. 

5. Book gigs based not on what they pay, but by who is on 
them! When you get multiple calls, choose gigs that have the 
best, most established musicians on them. Word of mouth from 
other pros is the strongest vehicle to getting your name out there. 
Follow this tip whenever possible, but only if you can financially 
afford to do so. 


"Choose gigs that have the best, most established 

MUSICIANS ON THEM. lORD Of MOUTH FROM OTHER PROS IS 
THE STRONGEST VEHICLE TO GETTING YOUR NAME OUT THERE." 


Not reading music is another major handicap for a drummer 
who wants to work consistently. It's necessary on the bandstand, 
in the studio—and equally important in the practice room. There 
are so many great method books out there that you can use to 
teach yourself fantastic techniques, but you must be able to read 
and interpret the music first. 

2. Music is a business; treat it as such. Unless you can imme¬ 
diately afford a personal manager, you are the CEO, CFO, VP of 
Marketing, and secretary of...YOU! Your job is to market and 
manage a product, and that product is your professional musical 
services. 

3. Make sure your city can sustain a working musician. This 
doesn't mean that you have to immediately move to New York, 
Los Angeles, or Nashville. (Actually, these cities are relatively 
saturated with great players.) Find any major metropolitan area 
that you enjoy and that has a healthy music scene. 

4. Be dependable and professional. Reliable transportation is 
a must! Every contractor appreciates it when you show up early to 
gigs and sessions. 

Get a pager and cell phone so you can return all business calls 


6. Be the dynamics boss! Playing sensitively, musically, and 
dynamically is an absolute must! When required, be able to keep 
energy levels up and tempos consistent at low volumes. If, while 
playing in an acoustic situation, you can't hear every musician 
playing, you're probably too loud! If you can't hear every word 
the singer is singing, you are too loud. 

Almost everybody can play loud if necessary. Rarely are fellow 
musicians impressed by how well you can bash; they're far more 
impressed if you exhibit musical dynamic control. The veteran 
musicians will respect you for it and the younger players will 
learn from your example. 

Singers appreciate it when you bring down the volume level of 
the song when returning to the verse. Bandmates really like it 
when you "telegraph" the various song parts, building excitement 
going into a chorus or bridge section. When playing ballads, try 
letting the song dynamically "breathe," or relax somewhat, when 
going back into verses, fades, or endings. 

7. Have professional and versatile gear. Your drumkit should 
allow you snare-, tom-, and bass-drum-size options to adapt to dif¬ 
ferent musical situations. (Collect a good selection of cymbals, 


MODERN DRUMMER JULY 1999 








Hands Up! 

Here's a little quiz about on-the-job hand signals. See if you 
know what to do if the bandleader or lead singer tosses one of 
these your way. 

1. If, while playing in a swing situation, the leader or bass play¬ 
er holds up four fingers, this means to do what? 

2. If, while playing almost any kind of popular music, the singer 
or leader signals to you by crossing his first two fingers or by 
touching his nose, he wants you to...? 

3. If a singer or leader holds up a clinched fist, this implies...? 

4. If the singer holds up her first two fingers in the form of a Y, 
this means to...? 

5. If the singer or leader taps his head with one finger, this sig¬ 
nals you to...? 

6. If the leader gestures like he's stretching a rubber band 
between his hands, he wants you to...? 

7. If, before starting a song, the leader signals to the band by 
pointing, for example, three fingers down, this indicates...? 

8. If the singer looks at you and signals like he's mixing a bowl 
of salad, this indicates...? 

9. If the singer waves her least polite finger at you, this 
means...? 

10. If the singer aggressively stomps her foot on the ground, 
quickly winds her wrist and index finger, or acts like she has to 
pee really bad, this tells you...? 

Answers: 

1. Swing in four. Don't play with a two-beat feel. 

2. Proceed to the bridge section of the song. 

3. End the song (at an appropriate time). 

4. Go to the verse section of the song. 

5. Go back to the top (or "head") of the song. This would often 
be a reprise of the intro, which leads to the ending. 

6. Vamp on the section you are presently playing or extend the 
solo section until cued otherwise. 

7. What key signature the song is in. In this example, the key is 
Eb. The number of fingers held up indicates how many sharps 
are in the key signature. Inversely, the number of fingers held 
down indicates how many flats. It's often helpful for a drummer 
to know these key indicators in a live situation where onstage 
communication is difficult. You can help the rest of the musi¬ 
cians who missed the cue. You might even receive an ever-so- 
hard-to-get nod of approval from the lead trumpet player 
acknowledging you were hip to this signal and that you passed 
it along. 

8. Brushes are appropriate for this song or section. 

9. She really didn't appreciate you practicing your groupings of 
5s, 7s, and 13s while she was trying to sing an emotional ballad. 

10. She wants the tempo faster—or she does indeed have to pee 
really bad! 


too.) Also have enough extra hardware to split the kit up into two 
small sets if needed. 

8. Know your electronics: samplers with pads, drum 
machines, computer sequencing. This doesn't mean you have to 
throw down big bucks every six months for the latest technology. 
But do learn how to operate the gear and have access to it through 
an instrument rental company, music store, or maybe even a 
drummer friend. You should own a good drum machine. 
Drummers, by far, make the best drum programmers. Drum 
machines also make great practice metronomes. 

9. Learn other instruments. Know your theory. I highly rec¬ 
ommend the piano as a second instrument. It's a wonderful writ¬ 
ing tool, it helps develop multi-hand coordination, and you learn 
treble and bass clefs. Guitar is great too! 

10. Try to sing. Singing drummers are rare, and the good ones 
work—a lot! Even if the idea of singing is completely foreign to 
you, you should at least consider trying to learn to sing basic 
background harmony parts. Every little bit of vocal support helps 
in a live situation. 

11. Hustle. Networking and social skills are a big part of your 
job. Get out there! Make business cards and demos of your play¬ 
ing. Get to know the contractors and leaders. No need to be 
pushy; just call and politely remind them that you're looking for 
more work than you're currently doing. Don't be the best-kept 
secret in town. 

12. Appearance. Adapt clothing and hair to the musical situa¬ 
tion. Buy a good-looking tuxedo; you'll need it for many profes¬ 
sional situations—maybe even to accept a Grammy award some¬ 
day! Also know when to take out the nose ring, cover the tattoo, 
and pull back your hair. The person paying you wants to look 
back behind the kit and be proud to say, "Yeah, that's my drum¬ 
mer." (And don't forget about good hygiene either!) 

13. Stay healthy and chemical-free. Traveling on the road and 
playing vigorously every night definitely takes its toll on a per¬ 
son's body. Don't be stupid with self-abusive use of drugs and 
alcohol. We've already lost too many great drummers to this non¬ 
sense. 

14. Stay informed. Read music trade magazines. Find out 
which management agencies are representing which artists. (You 
need this info to find out about auditions.) 

15. Attend clinics and drum events, and read drumming 
magazines. Get educated! Get inspired! 

16. Keep a positive attitude. Be the guy or gal that makes the 
session, gig, or tour an enjoyable experience for everyone 
involved. 

17. Have a backup plan. Have other skills or training to finan¬ 
cially get you by when needed. Meanwhile, keep pushing! Don't 
lose focus on the direction of your business! 


Russ McKinnon is best known for his recording and touring with 
legendary horn band Tower Of Power. His solid playing led to his 
being honored five straight years in the funk category ofMD's 
Readers' Poll. Russ remains very active in the Los Angeles music 
scene, and he's also in high demand as a clinician. 



MODEAfo DRUMMfcK JULY I VW 



orner 


11: 



Slingeriand Sound King Snare 


by Harry Cangany 



The immediate predecessors of the Sound Kings did not have 
etched lines on the shells. These shells were either chrome-plated 
or lacquered brass, and had a three-point strainer. Later the first 
pure-chrome Sound King was introduced. 

It's important to note that the "Sound King" name also referred 
to the lug design that Slingeriand introduced in 1955. So unless 
you're a Radio King fanatic, you would do well to recognize the 

Sound King lug design 
as the "modern" 
Slingeriand lug. 

While a lower-priced 
metal-shell snare, the 
Festival, was available, 
Slingeriand much more 
heavily promoted the 
Sound King, so you'll 
see thousands of them 
out there. The dmm first 
featured eight lugs, then 
later ten lugs and the 
famous Stick Saver 
hoops (which were first 
called Rim Shots). The 
strainer was always the 
famous—or infamous, 
depending on your point 
of view— Zoomatic. 

The Gene Krupa 
Sound King came in 
5x14 and 6 1/2x14 sizes. 
Today either model 
should retail for $175 to 
$300, depending on its 
condition. 

Did Gene Krupa actu¬ 
ally play his namesake? The covers of the old catalogs show him 
with an Artist model wood-shell drum. But I have seen quite a few 
video clips from the '60s and '70s in which he does play the Gene 
Krupa Sound King. Maybe we all should, too. 

n 


W ith all due respect to Buddy Rich, there may be no more 
venerated name in the history of American drumming than 
Gene Krupa, the "Ace Drummer Man." The Slingeriand 
drum company recognized this fact—and Gene's personal contri¬ 
bution to their success—by honoring him with this month's fea¬ 
tured drum, the Sound King. In actual fact, this was the second 
time that Slingeriand recognized Gene in this way. Years before, 
the company had 
named a 6 1/2x14 Radio 
King in his honor. But 
the Sound King sig¬ 
nalled the beginning of 
Slingeriand's manufac¬ 
ture of a series of great 
drums in the '60s. 

From the time it was 
introduced in the early 
1960s until after 
Gene's death in 1973, 
the drum was also 
known as the Gene 
Krupa model and the 
Gene Krupa Sound 
King. 

The Sound King was 
a brass-shelled drum. 

Brass Slingeriand 
drums date back to the 
1920s with the intro¬ 
duction of the ten- 
lug Artist, eight-lug 
Professional, Junior, 
and six-lug models. 

But metal snare drums 
fell out of favor in the 
'40s, and Slingeriand didn't bring out another new metal drum 
until the early '60s—as a response to the Ludwig Supraphonic. 
Incidentally, Slingeriand had fun with the ad campaign for the 
Sound King, stating that it "did not have the sound-disturbing 
center bead." Gosh, what drum could they have been alluding to? 



MODERN DRUMMER JULY 1999 










Bradley Webb 

Don't let Bradley 
Webb's baby face 
fool you. This 
young drummer 
from Kent, England 
is already a sea¬ 
soned jazz and pop 
veteran. At the ripe 
old age of twelve he 
regularly plays big 
band with the Kent 
Youth Jazz Orches¬ 
tra, small-group jazz with a variety of 
artists, and musical productions for sev¬ 
eral theaters in his area. 

Bradley's drumming education has 
included lessons with top British jazz 
drummer Bobby Worth, professor of 
percussion at the Royal College of 
Music Michael Skinner, master teacher 
Freddie Gruber, brush wizard Clayton 
Cameron, and R&B guru Zoro. This 
has all led him to develop a style— 
clearly exhibited on a live demo tape 
recorded with the Kent Youth Jazz 
Orchestra—that combines solid time, 
creative chops, and an understanding of 
musical styles far beyond what might 
be expected of a player his age. 

In 1997 Bradley was invited to 
become a Vic Firth endorser, making 
him the youngest international artist on 
their roster. In 1998 he was seen by 
Elton John drummer Charlie Morgan 
and Ralph Salmins (top session drum¬ 
mer and professor of drumkit at the 
Royal Academy of Music), who recom¬ 
mended him to Sabian for cymbal spon¬ 
sorship. And in 1999 his talents were 
recognized by Premier Drums, who 
have also become supporters. 

Currently the first student to receive 
a scholarship to study drumkit at 
Britain's elite Tonbridge school, 
Bradley is pursuing both his musical 
education and his performing career 
with dedication and enthusiasm. 


Luke Leone 

Hailing from Canada's countryside near 
Toronto, Euke Leone is a multi-talented 
drummer/percussionist, as well as a compos¬ 
er and arranger. He's also a builder (he cre¬ 
ated his recording studio with his own two 
hands) and a producer, and has just complet¬ 
ed the independent release of his first solo 
CD, Pulse 2 Worlds. The CD is a collage of 
original scores featuring varied musical 
themes and styles from world beat and pop 
to new age andjazz. 

Luke came well prepared to this ambitious 
project, having studied drumset with Dan 
Bodanis at The School Of Drum for seven 
years, and percussion with Ray Reilly of the 
Toronto Symphony for several more. He was 
the 1995 winner of the Open Class Players 
Challenge Music Awards for Ontario, 
Canada, and was the drummer and percus¬ 



sionist on three of Steve Middleton's 
Soundscape series CDs, which are sold in 
over thirty countries. He currently keeps 
busy on other recording projects, playing his 
Pearl drums and Zildjian cymbals. 

Luke's goal is an ambitious one: "To be 
involved in every facet of my music, ensur¬ 
ing the integrity of my vision." Never satis¬ 
fied and never still, Luke considers himself 
the proverbial "man on a mission," deter¬ 
mined to evolve spiritually and musically. 


Lou Grassi 

Lou Grassi is fifty-one years old, and is by no means new to 
the drumming scene. For thirty-five years he's spanned the 
jazz spectrum, playing everything from ragtime to free 
improvisation. He's also spent three decades in musical the¬ 
ater and as a composer/performer for dance groups. 

Lou's educational background includes a BA degree from 
Jersey City State College, and studies with Nick Cerrato, 

Tony Inzalaco, Sam Ulano, and Beaver Harris (who became 
Lou's mentor). From the 1970s to the present he's performed 
with such artists as Rob Brown, The Copascetics, Eddy 
Davis, James Garrison, Sheila Jordan, and many others. 

Since 1980 Lou has led his own Quintet, featuring original 
arrangements of stylistically diverse music reflecting more than sixty years of jazz tradition. 
In 1984 he toured US military installations throughout Central America, and also organized 
the Dixie Peppers, a sextet specializing in traditional Dixieland and swing repertoire. In 
1989 he toured Europe as part of the Warren Vache Sr. Syncopatin' Seven. 

In 1994 Lou re-entered the New York avant-garde scene, forming his own, totally impro- 
visational PoBand. Their 1995 concert for the New York Improvisor's Collective was 
recorded and subsequently released as PoGressions, receiving critical accolades worldwide. 
In 1998 the PoBand was featured at the Texaco NY Jazz Festival, and at the Rive De Gier 
International Jazz Festival. Lou then did a trio recording in Paris with the Rob Brown trio. 
Several CDs have resulted from Lou's projects in the past year—each quite different from 
the others, and each highly regarded by the jazz press. These various works reveal Lou to be 
a versatile, original, and imaginative musician. 




If you'd like to appear in On The Move, send us an audio 
or video cassette of your best work (preferably both solo 
and with a band) on three or four songs, along with a 
brief bio sketch and a high-quality color or black & 
white close-up photo. (Polaroids are not acceptable. 
Photos will not be paid for or credited.) The bio sketch 


should include your full name and age, along with your 
playing style(s), influences, current playing situation 
(band, recording project, freelance artist, etc.), how often 
and where you are playing, and what your goals are 
(recording artist, session player, local career player, etc.). 
Include any special items of interest pertaining to what 


you do and how you do it, and a list of the equipment 
you use regularly. Send your material to On The Move, 
Modern Drummer Publications, 12 Old Bridge Road, 
Cedar Grove, NJ 07009. Material cannot be returned, so 
please do not send original tapes or photos. 


MODERN DRUMMER JULY 1999 













The Drummers Of Frank Zappa 


by Mark Griffith 



T hroughout the history of drumming there have been 
a few gigs that have made a special impact on the 
music and drumming communities. Playing with 
the likes of Miles Davis, Sting, Steely Dan, Chick Corea, 
Weather Report, or John Scofield has automatically 
entered the drummers into a respected elite. But in some 
respects, playing with Frank Zappa has inspired even 
greater awe among drummers, and carried a special mys¬ 
tique that stems from the leader's demanding reputation 
and his penchant for over-the-top musical complexity. 

Many younger drummers immediately associate Chad 
Wackerman, Vinnie Colaiuta, or Terry Bozzio with 
Zappa's bands. But few remember the other important 
Zappa drummers: Aynsley Dunbar, Chester Thompson, 

Ralph Humphrey, and Jimmy Carl Black. Yet all of these 
drummers contributed significantly to the demands of this 
prestigious gig. 

To properly understand Zappa's drummers, you must 
first understand the history of Frank's music. Zappa's style 
of "fusion" went beyond jazz and rock 'n' roll to include 
doo-wop, folk music from around the world, sea chanteys, 
the blues, and twentieth-century classical. Zappa's musi¬ 
cians had to be ready to play anything their leader's expan¬ 
sive musical mind could envision. Let's look at the record¬ 
ed legacy and the evolution of the drummers of Frank 
Zappa. 

Frank Zappa himself was a drummer. His early drum¬ 
ming efforts, which can be heard on four tracks from The 
Lost Episodes, aren't groundbreaking, yet they are loose 
and very confident. One can only wonder if Frank's exper¬ 
imentation with an expanded rhythmic language can be 
traced to his early drumming. Zappa's other early experi¬ 
mental recordings (all included on The Lost Episodes) 
include drummers Chuck Grove, Vic Mortensen, and 
Drumbo (John French). 

The first drummer to play in Zappa's Mothers Of Invention was 
Jimmy Carl Black, on the influential Freak Out! Jimmy's playing 
sounds like an extension of Zappa's early drumming: loose, 
orchestrated, supportive, and unpredictable. It's also interesting to 
note that it possesses the same relentlessness and sense of reckless 
abandon that many of the later Zappa drummers are now known 


Frank Zappa with Jimmy Carl Black on drums, circa 1969 

for. Covering unusual, creative themes, early Zappa music was 
very '"60s," without being overly psychedelic. Freak Out!, 
Absolutely Free, and We 're Only in It For The Money are quintes¬ 
sential examples of rebellious creative '60s music, and all feature 
Jimmy Carl Black. As the rock-solid foundation of The Mothers 
Of Invention, he began the long tradition of adventuresome Zappa 
drummers. Jimmy is also the drummer on Cruising With Ruben & 


MODERN DRUMMER JULY 1999 




The Jets, Zappa's excursion into traditional doo-wop music. 

Zappa's seminal Lumpy Gravy, the first of many orchestral 
recordings, was released in 1967. It included great studio drum¬ 
mers like Shelly Manne, John Guerin, Paul Humphrey, and 
Frankie Capp, but did not document a working Zappa band. For 
this article, we will only discuss the drummers who played with 
the working and touring Zappa bands. 

Back in The Mothers Of Invention, Jimmy Carl Black was soon 
joined by drummer/percussionist Billy Mundi, who was later 
replaced by Arthur Dyer Tripp. Both Mundi and Tripp furthered 
the rhythmic support of the band, but Black remained the band's 
primary drummer. The addition of a percussionist who also played 
drums expanded the Zappa sound a great deal. This second edition 
of The Mothers Of Invention was best documented on the live 
recording Ahead Of Their Time and the popular Uncle Meat. The 
home video Uncle Meat includes footage of this band in action. 
The Mothers also appeared on the recordings Weasels Ripped My 
Flesh and Burnt Weeny Sandwich. This music was aggressive and 
entertaining, but sometimes lacked the focus of earlier recordings 
such as Freak Out! This focus would soon be restored, however, 
with the changing of some personnel and a lot of new music. 

One change came when Aynsley Dunbar joined Zappa and 
recorded Hot Rats, which featured the momentous compositions 
"Willie The Pimp" and "Peaches En Regalia," both of which 
Zappa would play with all of his later bands. Hot Rats introduces 
Dunbar as a sturdy but adventurous drummer. This mostly instru¬ 
mental recording clearly defined the direction of all of the future 
Zappa bands. Hot Rats is a true classic, and Aynsley Dunbar is 
one of the reasons why. 

Chunga's Revenge is a very good recording that successfully 
combined the humor and satire of Zappa's earlier vehicle with the 
instrumental prowess of the new band. Again, Dunbar is aggres¬ 
sive, creative, and powerful. Pay close attention to his amazing 
solo on "The Nancy And Mary Music." Also check out Zappa's 
return to drumming, on the melodic drum and percussion solo 
"The Clap." Here Frank's playing is more precise, while remain¬ 
ing loose and spontaneous. Unfortunately, Chunga's Revenge was 
largely overlooked because of the great success of Hot Rats, but 
both the music and the drumming are excellent. 

The Mothers Of Invention and an orchestra are featured 
throughout Zappa's next recording, 200 Motels, which is a sound¬ 
track to a bizarre film of the same name. While remaining solid, 
Dunbar began to use a more advanced rhythmic vocabulary and 
play more over-the-top. Just Another Band From LA. is a good 
live recording featuring Dunbar, but the live Fillmore East, June 
1971 recording captures this band at its best. Also check out 
Playground Psychotics, The Grand Wazoo, and Waka/Jawaka. 

Nineteen seventy-three brought another change of drummers, 
and a change of musical attitude. The '70s brought fusion to the 
musical forefront. Zappa's influence was undeniable, but he had 
also been influenced by the original fusion bands. Fusion pioneer 
violinist Jean Luc Ponty and keyboardist George Duke had now 
joined Zappa, and the drummer was the technical wizard and 
fusion forefather Ralph Humphrey. 

Each Zappa drummer conformed to the requirements estab¬ 
lished by the drummers before him, but also added his own dis- 


The Zappa Drummer 
Evolution On Record 

by Mark Griffith 

The following list includes important Frank Zappa record¬ 
ings categorized by their featured drummer (or drum¬ 
mers), roughly in the chronological order of their record¬ 
ing dates. Numerous compilations result in significant 
overlap. Release dates are included; when release and 
recording dates vary significantly, both dates are includ¬ 
ed. All releases are available on Rykpdisc Records, except 
for the Beat The Boots series, which is on Fooee Records, 
and in a boxed set from WEA/Atlantic/Rhino. Most Zappa 
recordings include some material that was recorded live 
in concert. On this list, items that are specifically designat¬ 
ed as "live" were recorded live in their entirety, without 
many (or any) overdubs. 

Frank Zappa, Chuck Grove, Vic Mortenson, Drumbo 
(John French) 

The Lost Episodes, recorded 1958-79, released 1998, 
RCD40573, mostly pre-Mothers rarities and demos 

Jimmy Carl Black 

Freak Out!, recorded 1964, released 1966, RCD10501 

Jimmy Carl Black with Billy Mundi 

Absolutely Free, 1967, RCD10502 
We're Only In It For The Money, 1968, RCD10503 
Cruising With Ruben & The Jets, 1968, RCD 10505 

Jimmy Carl Black with Arthur Dyer Tripp 

Weasels Ripped My Flesh, recorded 1967-69, 
released 1970, RCD10510 
Uncle Meat, 1969, RCD10506/07 
Ark, recorded 1968, released 1991, R270538, 

Beat The Boots bootleg 
Ahead Of Their Time, recorded 1968, 
released 1993, RCD10559, live 
Burnt Weeny Sandwich, 1969, RCD10509 

Paul Humphrey, Frankie Capp, Shelly Manne, 
and John Guerin 

Lumpy Gravy, 1968, RCD10504, orchestral, no Mothers Of 
Invention, all drumset performers were studio musicians 

Aynsley Dunbar 

Freaks And Motherfu*****, recorded 1970, 
released 1983, R270538, Beat The Boots bootleg 
Hot Rats, 1969, RCD10508 
Chunga's Revenge, 1970, RCD10511 
200 Motels, 1971, RCD10513/14 
Fillmore East, June 1971, 1971, RCD10512, live 
Just Another Band From LA, 1972, RCD10515, live 
Playground Psychotics, recorded 1971, 
released 1992, RCD 10557/58 
The Grand Wazoo, 1972, RCD10517 
Waka/Jawaka, 1972, RCD10516 

Ralph Humphrey 

Over-Nite Sensation, 1973, RCD10518 
Piquantique, recorded 1973, released 1991, 

R270544, Beat The Boots bootleg 

Aynsley Dunbar, Ralph Humphrey, Jim Gordon, 
and John Guerin 

Apostrophe, 1974, RCD10519 

Ralph Humphrey and Chester Thompson 

Roxy & Elsewhere, 1974, RCD10520, live 



MOOEWHDfllJMMEfi JLH.'V 

















tinct voice. The common denominator that unites them all was 
unbridled and fearless creativity. In retrospect, Humphrey seems 
to have been the logical next step in the evolution of the Zappa 
drummers. His playing was slippery, and his advanced rhythmic 
concept furthered the complexity that Dunbar had introduced. 
Ralph refined the spontaneity of Jimmy Carl Black, but was more 
sophisticated and adventurous than either Black or Dunbar. 

Ralph Humphrey's first recording with Zappa was the exciting 
Over-Nite Sensation. This recording captured a band of virtuoso 
musicians playing everything that Zappa could dish out. 
Fortunately, this "fearless fusion" band was also caught live on 
Piquantique, from the Beat The Boots series of Zappa's officially 
sanctioned bootleg recordings. Piquantique features one of the 
first "impossible to play" Zappa compositions, "Kung Fu." (This j 
tradition of daunting compositions includes "RDNZL," "The 
Black Page," and "Drowning Witch," all of which gave even the j 
best Zappa bands and drummers plenty to chew on.) These are two 
priceless recordings of a stunning band that permanently estab- j 
lished the Zappa musical direction. 

The next recording, Apostrophe, was released in 1974. It fea¬ 
tured both Dunbar and Humphrey, as well as studio legends Jim 
Gordon and John Guerin. This recording is particularly important 
because it introduced several Zappa "standards," including 
"Nanook Rubs It," "Cosmik Debris," and "Don't Eat The Yellow 
Snow." The drumming on Apostrophe is tasteful, but unusually 
sparse. This sparseness left the compositions open for a great deal 



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Chester Thompson 

You Can't Do That On Stage Anymore Vol. 2, The Helsinki 
Concert, recorded 1974, released 1993, RCD10563/64 
Studio Tan, recorded 1974, released 1978, RCD10526 
One Size Fits All, 1975, RCD10521 

Chester Thompson, Terry Bozzio, 
and Chad Wackerman 

Sleep Dirt, recorded 1974-80, released 1980, RCD10527 

Terry Bozzio 

Bongo Fury, 1975, live, RCD10522 
ZootAllures, 1976, RCD10523 
Orchestral Favorites, recorded 1975, 
released 1979, RCD 10529 
Zappa In New York, recorded 1976, 
released 1978, RCD10524/25 
Baby Snakes, recorded 1977, released 1983, 
live, RCD10539 

Sheik Yerbouti, 1979, RCD10528 

David Logeman 

You Are What You Is, recorded 1978, 
released 1981, RCD10536 

Vinnie Colaiuta 

Shut Up TV Play Yer Guitar I, II, III, recorded 1977-80, 
released 1981, RCD 10533/34/35, mostly 1979-80 
guitar solo material, one 1977 track featuring Bozzio 
Joe's Garage, 1979, RCD10530/31 
Saarbrucken 1978, released 1991, R270543, Beat The 
Boots bootleg 

Any Way The Wind Blows, recorded 1979, 
released 1991, R270541, Beat The Boots bootleg 
Tinsel Town Rebellion, 1981, two tracks with 
David Logeman, all live, RCD10532 

Vinnie Colaiuta and Chad Wackerman 

Guitar, recorded 1979-84, released 1995, RCD10550/51, 
Shut Up... sequal that includes numerous tracks 
with Wackerman 

Chad Wackerman 

The Man From Utopia, recorded 1981-82, released 1983, 
two tunes with Vinnie Colaiuta, RCD10538 
Ship Arriving Too Late To Save A Drowning Witch, 
recorded 1982, RCD10537 

Them Or Us, recorded 1982, released 1984, RCD10543 
London Symphony Orchestra Vol. I, 1983, RCD 10540/41 
Thing-Fish, 1984, RCD 10544/45 
Does Humor Belong In Music?, 1986, live, RCD10548 
You Can't Do That On Stage Anymore Vol. 3, released 
1989, RCD105765/66, Beat The Boots bootleg compiling 
live cuts mostly featuring the 1984 group with Chad 
Wackerman, but also others with Dunbar, Humphrey, 
Thompson, and Bozzio 

You Can't Do That On Stage Anymore Vol. 4, released 
1989, RCD10567/68, same notes as Vol. 3 
Mothers Of Prevention, 1985, RCD10547 
London Symphony Orchestra Vol. II, 1987, RCD 10540/41 
Broadway The Hard Way, 1989, live, RCD10552 
Make A Jazz Noise Here, recorded 1988, released 1991, 
RCD 10555/56 

The Best Band You Never Heard In Your Life, recorded 
1988, released 1991, live, RCD10553/54 

Videos 

(All available from Honker Home Video) 

200 Motels 
Baby Snakes 

Does Humor Belong In Music? 

Uncle Meat 


MODE R N DRUMME R JU LY 1999 






























of interpretation by later drummers. 

It is these interpretations that make Zappa music very interest¬ 
ing, and what made Frank’s bands almost "jazz-like." Zappa’s 
many bands interpreted the "Zappa standards" in the same way 
that jazz groups have interpreted standards like "Autumn Leaves" 
and "There Will Never Be Another You." 

Ralph Humphrey had been in the Zappa ensemble for about a 
year when in 1974 a second drummer, Chester Thompson, was 
added to the group. The double drummer idea was nothing new to 
the Zappa band, but whereas Arthur Dyer Tripp and Billy Mundi 
had also doubled on percussion while Jimmy Carl Black played 
only drumset, Humphrey and Thompson both played the kit. 
Chester fit the Zappa concept like a glove, and the synergy of the 
two drummers—as well as percussionist extraordinaire Ruth 
Underwood, who was also featured in the 1974 band—provided 
an adventurous, dense, and virtuosic rhythmic springboard for this 
amazing group. 

Roxy & Elsewhere, with its shining "Don't You Ever Wash 
That Thing" and "Son Of Orange County," is one of Zappa’s all- 
time best recordings, a virtual study in odd time signatures and 
aggressive drumming. Note in particular Humphrey and 
Thompson's signature double-drummer tom fill on "More Trouble 
Every Day," which later snuck into Genesis's "Afterglow." 

Less than six months later, Humphrey departed the band, leav¬ 
ing Chester Thompson as the lone drummer. With a lot of touring 
under the band's belt, the music got faster, looser, and even more 



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aggressive. This sleeker Zappa ensemble (reduced from eleven 
members to only six) is captured on You Can't Do That On Stage 
Anymore Vol. 2, The Helsinki Concert. Chester's astounding live 
(solo) presence deserved to be documented. According to Zappa, 
this was one of the audience's favorite ensembles, as well as one 
of his own. 

The next recording, Studio Tan, shows an ideal cross-section of 
Frank Zappa's broad compositional range, and Chester Thompson 
sounds great throughout. "The Adventures Of Greggery Peccary" 
is typical of Zappa's twisted Broadway show-like story/composi¬ 
tions, and the challenging "RDNZL" appears on many different 
recordings. "Revised Music For Guitar And Low Budget 
Orchestra" is a standout example of Zappa's group supported by 
an orchestra. And "Lemme Take You To The Beach" is a brief 
experiment with surf-influenced pop music. (Studio drummer Paul 
Humphrey sits in for Thompson only on this track.) Chester 
Thompson also plays on One Size Fits All. 

The next drummer to fill the Zappa drum chair was Terry 
Bozzio. Terry combined the wild sense of humor and spontaneity 
of Jimmy Carl Black, the hard-hitting aggressiveness of Aynsley 
Dunbar, the sheer virtuosity of Ralph Humphrey, and the groove 
of Chester Thompson. On the live Bongo Fury Bozzio stays 
"inside" while providing a firm foundation for Zappa and Captain 
Beefheart's musical antics. And he is a dominating presence on 
parts of Orchestral Favorites, one of the most outstanding Zappa 
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Zappa's large group was back for Live In 
New York, the first recording that contains 
Bozzio's famous "Black Page" drum solo. 
Also check out the amazing "Cruisin' For 
Burgers." This adventurous band's groove 
was relentless, largely because Terry and 
bassist Patrick O'Hearn always kept the 
band firmly grounded. No drummer has 
ever orchestrated drum parts like Terry 
Bozzio, with his signature aggression, 
grace, and control. 

Sheik Yerbouti isn't as unbridled as the 
previous recordings with Bozzio, but like 
Apostrophe, it created a foundation for 
future interpretation. Check out the amaz¬ 
ing "Rubber Shirt," "Dancin' Fool," and 
"Yo Mama." Terry also shines on two 
tunes from the Sleep Dirt recording, 
"Filthy Habits" and "The Ocean Is The 
Ultimate Solution," and plays on 1975's 
Zoot Allures. 

Terry's last album with the Zappa band 
(recorded in 1977, but not released until 
1983) was the live Baby Snakes (available 
as a CD and a video). This recording 
includes many of the same tunes from Live 
In New York, and played by a much smaller 
band with a less aggressive approach. Still, 
the video is an insightful look at a live 
Zappa performance featuring Bozzio. 

For an interesting study of how Terry's 
drumming evolved while he was with 
Zappa, listen to Bongo Fury, Live In New 
York, and Baby Snakes consecutively. 
Recorded almost exactly a year apart from 
each other, these three live albums invite 
comparison. 

Drummer David Logeman had a brief 
stay in the Zappa band, recording the entire 
You Are What You Is and some of the live 
Tinsel Town Rebellion. Like Apostrophe 
and Sheik Yerbouti, You Are What You Is is 
an important album not so much for the 
playing, but instead for the many Zappa 
standards it introduced. Logeman's drum¬ 
ming was sure and firm, but his Zappa days 
were short. He briefly re-joined the band in 
1980. 

This brings us to the inimitable Vinnie 
Colaiuta. The Zappa classic Joe's Garage, 
Acts. I, II & III features Vinnie from begin¬ 
ning to end (although Terry Bozzio does 
brief vocal duties as Bald-Headed John, 
one of the story's numerous wacky charac¬ 
ters). This satirical, frequently lewd opus 


(described in the liner notes as "a stupid 
story about how the government is trying 
to do away with music") includes "Dong 
Work For Yuda," "Keep It Greasey," and 
"Watermelon In Easter Hay." Joe's 
Garage features a little of everything 
drum-wise: inside, outside, reggae, groove, 
funky, etc. Many drummers have raved 
about this recording in the pages of 
Modern Drummer, and it's a recording that 
every drummer should own. 

On the other side of things, the three vol¬ 
umes of Shut Lip TV Play Yer Guitar are 
completely outside and not for everyone. It 
will take a while for your ears to acclimate 
to the musical craziness on these amazing 
discs, which find Zappa superimposing 
guitar and rhythm section parts from differ¬ 
ent performances. The result is some of the 
most over-the-top rock 'n' roll music ever 
produced. I also highly recommend The 
Frank Zappa Guitar Book to any drummer 
who wants to further investigate Colaiuta's 
rhythmic approach. It includes transcrip¬ 
tions of these recordings (mostly guitar, but 
quite a few drum transcriptions as well). 

Tinsel Town Rebellion is the only "offi¬ 
cial" live recording Vinnie made with 
Zappa. However, Any Way The Wind 
Blows and Saarbrucken 1978 from the 
Beat The Boots bootleg series are the best 
documents of Vinnie's live performances 
with Zappa. Stylistically these three 
recordings fall somewhere between Joe's 
Garage and Shut Up TV Play Yer Guitar. 
Colaiuta's last performances with Zappa 
were on two tracks from The Man 
From Utopia. 

The last drummer to hold the coveted 
Zappa drum chair was Chad Wackerman. 
Chad joined the band in 1981, and record¬ 
ed most of The Man From Utopia. Next 
came Ship Arriving Too Late To Save A 
Drowning Witch, featuring "I Come From 
Nowhere" and the hit single "Valley Girl." 
While hardly typical Zappa, Utopia, Ship, 
and Wackerman's next recording, Them Or 
Us, did document a new direction for the 
Zappa band. 

You Can't Do That On Stage Anymore, 
Vols. 1-6 display Chad ingeniously inter¬ 
preting all of his predecessors. This series 
consists of compilations of live perfor¬ 
mances of all of Zappa's bands, but a 
majority of the performances (except for 


MODERN DRUMMER JULY 1999 













Volume 2) include Wackerman on drums. 

Wackerman and percussionist Ed Mann 
are also featured on the London Symphony 
Orchestra, Vols. I & II recordings (now 
issued together as a set). Though drumset 
isn't used on the entire album, it is inter¬ 
spersed beautifully throughout the compo¬ 
sitions. "Pedro's Dowry," "Bogus Pomp," 
and "Strictly Genteel" were previously 
recorded on Orchestral Favorites (with 
Bozzio), and the different approaches are 
fascinating to study. Wackerman is explo¬ 
sive on the first movement of "Bob In 
Dacron," and very melodic on the first 
movement of "Mo N' Herb's Vacation." 

London Symphony Orchestra, Vols. I & 
II is a perfect resource for studying the 
abstract side of Chad Wackerman's drum¬ 
ming. Here he occasionally sounds like the 
avant-garde jazz drummers of the late '60s. 
This is some of the most exciting "out" 
drumset playing ever recorded. 

In 1984 Zappa recorded Thing-Fish and 
the live CD and video Does Humor Belong 
In Music?, both of which feature 
Wackerman. Humor bears some similari¬ 
ties to Them Or Us, but the video release is 
a gem. For those who haven't seen 
Wackerman play, this is a great way to do 
so. His effortless approach and relaxed 
execution are unparalleled. 

Both Mothers Of Prevention and Jazz 
From Hell feature a large amount of pro¬ 
grammed Synclavier drumming by Zappa, 
which gives us another glimpse of his 
drumming concept as it had been influ¬ 
enced by a long line of fantastic players. 
Not surprisingly, however, these 
Synclavier-rendered performances are a 
little stiff. 

Frank Zappa's last working band (known 
as "the 1988 band") was a twelve-member 
ensemble that could do anything. The three 
amazing live recordings Broadway The 
Hard Way, Make A Jazz Noise Here, and 
The Best Band You Never Heard In Your 
Life are superb documents of an extremely 
versatile ensemble being poked and prod¬ 
ded by Chad Wackerman's challenging 
drumming. The very satirical Broadway 
The Hard Way also finds Sting sitting in on 
a stirring version of The Police's "Murder 
By Numbers." Make A Jazz Noise Here is 
even better, because it focuses on music 
more than satire. 


Frank Zappa asked this band to do 
everything from "Stairway To Heaven," 
Ravel's "Bolero," and "Theme From 
Bonanza" to Zappa standards such as "The 
Eric Dolphy Memorial Barbecue." The 
1988 band was The Best Band You Never 
Heard In Your Life, a title derived from the 
fact that many audiences never had a 
chance to see and hear them live. This 
recording is a Zappa —and drumming— 
classic. 

Frank Zappa released almost fifty 
recordings in his all-too-brief but extreme¬ 
ly prolific twenty-five-year career. In 
studying this strange, intricate music, as 
well as the "family tree" of Frank's influ¬ 
ential drummers and the high standards he 
held them to, we can all become much bet¬ 
ter musicians. Thanks to Jimmy, Billy, 
Arthur, Aynsley, Ralph, Chester, Terry, 
David, Vinnie, Chad—and most of all to 
Frank Zappa, a true genius. 



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MODERN DRUMMER JULY J999 




















iMH Market ) 


Advertiser* 

Advert Lee in Drum Mjriid ;piJ reach o*ct a quarter 
millii'u Jrunii'iLrs ui.sr|«lwide Jiv nilv SI *11 per wnrd 
p[u=»- 54.50 t'wr lui Kiln.*™. 11 k address chuigc due* not 
m-. I il lLj VOliT halilc i it ^iimpuiim iiuhsi’ ll M>J-i:r 1 1 rn 1 

miRh Up jppyji in Ewld type .irwJ iidkJ &.50 for each 
■wild word i Miiiihiiiiii dtai^r hu in ad. $lft. All uds 
AMiM he paid: m (nil Kj die I5lli of ihc mnnth. lAdr- or 
pay merit* received uFrer ihu Jeudhoc vrili be held for 
rhi 1 neil issue units, y<m ^h-L-ify iwbfifwttt ■ IT vusj 
hJmi wiiiic mir mi lo nun in adhwqUehT you mu* 
pnv for thnse ud-. in ttli■juice. Please nde tbnt your m I 
win upfUNir in prist apprmuiiiibely ten week* iFbcf lI:v 

iU[L'fl lLuI- I'uNiviii-r il’iL" rij'jll Ln ?dil -ill Hat- 

rifted n<K. Wank in ul I t-npiluE k-l K-rs me prohibited 
M.irf odt> and paymenti in MD an Drum Mjurket. 12 
Old liiLLly ii- .11 i LvdiU (lime. NJ llTiJIW. 

hi Sale 

Siretseli Drums. part*. Inj'ii IhhiIs, budy^s lTl- 
Www,*BttadiMI/' cdpWti/.fcl: iHlfti ^hi-lPtf. 

kiilinur L'kishinl I truism. -.ii:inis. lull SLUt, nil si ja;-. 
CwrtHjm 5K Hkte EliuLc#*, BoK ISO. Calilumiu, KY 
41007. Tel: 1WHoftJ5-52kK. 

Mil hmm. “Drum Covninp SfJdduJisE. H ctiutant druid 
rc-iw-'i 1 . erinu. cumudi gi iphipa/l ujj i ■■* (in -kcLL jutd 
head*. Drum repair* .m,: hu.iring cd^c? I’d 'ftlfli 

Drum Supplv Ihiuse inijpli- JltfUs. LtlVcda^h I.I,|S, 
und JiLudvi are Free Parts Gulth- lor builder*! Tel: 
m\\ 42V3m r 47 InjtniiM Si., JaetRun, T\ r J83M 

Cymbal dEscfii uTer Law. lr>w priec-s rm Sabi an 
A A/A AX h land /iIlL|Ijii As Free delivery. Free 
brnwliurr Ande^nn Music. SI71 Soph ttiiilwny Si 
S.E.. Medicine Hm. Albcna. Canada TLA 229. Id: 
14113* 

Fames hiuuienilkd N‘.«rlh Arrierkin birch ilnmi slid is 
in FuutDM, N jcu^iJcuhl'. arid Mqucr turns -senes, fin 
kbed [pc uiifini-vhirU. Pur h-r-.H-huir Cvslnct; l : .unkes 
Dram Co.. 22^ Huniiliun SL. Sauguv. XtA I'MSIEkh Td: 
iTHM 23iM4n4. 

I rtv Phi '1 m CuLuhrii.!: Ludwig SJEngcrlaiHJ and smitl 
Maaiujj, hn^h ifiir-brnilEiU 1 . V(ttti£-c E5rum 

C’enifj. 224} Ihnirv Drive. Lihcnwide. IA 525b“- 
*1531. Cdl I.SI5; MJ-TAl I. itf udL lull free aperumr U* 
HtHl nuii:Ki'r Kdv i 5 ( ^ i h'LA.l-310 I Iplerpei; 

\\toV'- vLiiu^Ei-Jnjm.ecvTR We biiy-.MflL-trade. 

Our naant' Js 11 mem* Fir. isn?4 null urd ci e:au- 

li M' has pic I iitl's ..ml p¥i<i> I mi ImihtrLiU id L’nilmj! 

dnmucU. cymhnk iHicessiirits, brmk^. ;ini1 vldws rust 
hiuikl Ln i'[her catalngs. Km: ejlo3>:<^. l'liII (717) .l-i.J ■ 
JTSfi. H'.naii 11 - dnimjcE^TtsdrcKu; nu-i. Visit mur Wrfi 
^ite H www.tlnimn^Lci'gm 

Wi-JjJeI Ifu-ml Ihm f'fls riui paT%;ussiii|:. ruri^f n 1 : - 
3>iiu iphek-. ul l an^;^. ukurtimi^* honyus. uhaltm. 

ins Hue I LOU vidcus. Marie- by Hand—fListJ E 5 ;. 

lltnrL .wn^lUbuTnJdmms.^epni Free ratitlu^: 
(l«Mli 9^FHAJ4D. 

<Tks iinly 5^.^ all ntvi rvhHs**. IMus mnlL- wilJi 
fiiUHie Over ISb.iMI discomil Ellies. '3'eJ: iHKJii 23ti- 
253lL. CXLl I. Ww vs‘ inLlnwah.LOULf^hjl/ 

kerao VislerKd^ A com ties n «?liefls. VcrwcjlkJ, 
guuiiliru, L.lhJ faW sliL-ris UVullsibk I vii < UsJolli DfWri. 

K) Kns 2E» Tunlu m nr. CA 9-537q Tel/fiis: 4100) 
5SM25 I. 


Sh k id hijtli nmple dnivu |prSrc>V Custmii >i^us and 
.■-ih fr , I.™-, I'.'Vi pHL-fs \im will be rpipn^wl Frev 
hTimhure Obelisk drums. AJn -131^ n-| -v,r-. S EL . 
C’nlgaiy. Albert^ C’unjida T2C 2f l H. Tel i4il^) 7 b- 
yib'3. 

Fred ^ccirooie ilnira ruCijInR, The ksl eles r tn.iFilL- 
drum\-ni Hie plunel unduthn^ Niniimk. DLrighubi. tne- 
g-ers. Lvnikih. Fui[ls.I. . puputof CimeenCaM kin. und 
li.^eJUSvcPTie^ i'all lur lira teI denier hKPJi 777-1 | <s-l, 
■rtAY^.eJrums.eisiiii 

Sdfcf Cfi lhe sopsl Rliir N l3minl^.MiKT I^Jk 7 We lv^ 
lute Vtntd^v (.■rd'^b, l.udwif, R^i>. eLc ALmi, K 
ZLIdjian jb4 Pnwtc. Luau^uvs jvaLiable. 3 I 4K 
r-biat'jcld N F Ski lie 2S0.'fifiuid kapids, Vl 4V575. 
Please cull unl^ tu huy t h;SL. ur Inide. <M^3l 733-LLIM, 
iftir.t ifiiUKWW. las (ftbd .bO-24'Pf. 

Krtckin' KH-h’n Pecyrled Drums anti Bemusjnnl Wf 
cany u iiu^t- seleHUMi i «f n^d drums, cy mtials, dutuK 
Iifid .k.i ■.■ssnni’-. lit |>Vrat price*, by marl. I nr nry-mv 
who loves dram^! Ph-ine ui l r T I L i i 5%-HhI7. lu fn\ 
54MJII I hrr nur list, wriiii us u 0$4O 

Cuvr^iJ Huail. SlisIi 1 H. fr^Ks, ^iintee. CA 

■J207I Visiu'Mf 7AmeJt/EJisciwtr 

3kH Ptanet SlmSt—H b£f IHnniimts! c>n Scinor, 
Fvimi^ ZddiiJia. Awk E.P, Premier. S,ihiur. AqaaRtm. 
Gihridpt, ddnmi, Re SlirijgtrUnd. KAT 

KLtH.irodit s, Jind Drum Tedh. I22J Shh HursihoulW 
Ln., LuuiivJUe. KY 4 i i 222. Tel: {5Q2 \ 423-SOU I Vim, 
MV, AnKX Dis^ivsr, Visu Its Mfl Ike Wtfb Jt. 

www .Mdp(uin-’1rn|isic cc.m 

SSyrk Fk 1 PeretiNxinn m'I drums m*de by ira 
AnnenL“Ein. All repn rs and reliaEshing d*sne tay the 
sjrnr Am^ricuii fkilid und hhiv*- urviutas nepw u-vTuLhlf 

IP artj ilxe i'urk S’ie. tJie ptlN usiiuriuJi' chater, 
7?A\ D2 Fran Ave., Cnnogi Park. CA 01303. Tef 
I Hr Hi <192 i)7fl3 tif 1 il ’. i H I K ' 09M,^H. I n I mi JI 
*sww wi‘ stwHii 111 t L i litr . 1 ■■ piirk.pie/rj r'.i nbH hi ml Ef milil" 
pnrfcpir fl 6 wc Kt vharirlocml. 

IStwE in thi! hiu-.lt Hupp'-. IbSims C h 1 1 h:- m.dts'] h^u?U 
prn drum slupp 1 Huue stnult ril new kits, munruuns c| 

Usi:d and vintage bEs ul killur priL-n-' Hl-jlL-,, -.luks, 

eymhuls. l'anhv^n- an I pt?mjs«i<Tni ready tn '-hip! r^lt 
l'<i p nur lolhfrec liitanber, ur email us. 
iuppijiluf^iwiiiuui.Linci. Cali i.b)3t T'ifi 57T7 Alsu, 
■Aitl Drum Fc?t FithI 'Miirtv SUJ 

iMj.aiiv Kiel ntftht riiSud Atisttr, I Am l bc lliutd, 
hy I bint MeivA^ihu r Must *utpictc bonk ever wpI 
leu on Budd* R?ch -M r J pjees. Lots of pictures. 
H D2ill Hardcover. ■s-Jd.'.J-S. now :ii sLiktk. Juhn 
FisnwiiA'wski drum .Simp, nun 09 Rd„ 

Omaite Cit>, 11 h3IMll. Vjsu, Mii-terCard. and 
DLwxivcr oL'eepleti Cull (HDUj H77-5407. 

Hflh-Kkk! Eially uhwivcitt uny sisMr l-.ma iw:n u puiwh> 
bu.s> drum Sun pie l ■ -hi pn t [ seiup includes fully 

wJJu^tnhk hiH'p-rwFUiiEcd -pun. fumpkle Tv^sr ksl Jtf3. 
[leultni WlIviutk. Dnim Supply Huusc, Lei: l^ltl 413- 
37Sft. Nd2 w, uii gfilfira ^an/bUta by kick. 

The ward is mill The hiilte^l T-Sliirl dcM.givs lur 
*iruiiLuiL:is jic rums J MLLc\ L (n jpliKs. Fm liihi Hiile 
Its J Alikty B Drapbiw. ' Slime Ktl. Ss r i™tw:s(r. CT 
0(M5. Or visi>i our very eout Web siie al: 
www .iLfur m ii iiig-i ■ sh in .limh 

Firt aul irf the wuud^. i. Isanpc ihc way mu tic is eieul- 
ed file yeur 20l'lli it c luci i Fimliek l|tm-r 

sLLiks ELtiiniU&4 sticks* mitreCI ulnininuni !S stL'ks. 


v ■=- JULY lfl» 


Puiuhi peiulmy t^TiL'd.i hiieuKerinp. ft 14 l he Sirees 
S.W, Cedar Rapids. |a 5744U Trl r3IO) ’^IW 

■ hhDHI SIS. hi ill- Jbj ndiriaftcid dmm>. of exqutsile 
quality. S<s[id shells, omie veitser-k eUis^ic wraps 

Tel: i7S7l 40|-4<ift5. email: rhhilmm^&'-uul.ei.im. 
www. rbhdrumiH.enin 

Mipult H rlsl If uiEik , r%. "The ul Ilia air prneticc 
f,!ji,!ks." Si iIh 3 ahimmuPM ..V siiEhl Iliads I'lattice 1 -1uk- 

?'ree inh pack, l ei - HOQ} 645-6673, 1434 Corlp 
IX Jims a, CA0512O. Vi * * 

Cracked t7mhaK7 Like iliem fLwd for u lot k:-s Ului 
huvm*] new :' S.ASI- iu t'vmhjil Sulvupe, 1 Ilk ii. 
AeisiIil HIvlI , ff IW'I), £3ak "l-raHk. El. W)3£M. Teh (TOH) 
3^S ■ 171 ft. www .eymbahalvQ^c.enrm. 

>irw; 4 .1 11 1 h 11 1 DrtuuWorks ineniPlaces u rww line isf 
^nlid nnu-ply Himrt ihelh nnrf lining in u '.mniely of 
diUlhrsLk' and ewstlc hsjrdwikkh. AImu hflqm Ufld full 
Ills eustim’-haili In nrder. ^pj , j , ii*l Il1h4nrlnry 
prlet^, ReLalAh IhUt suL. hur hcwlmrr, eunnrer: Glabul 
DnimWnrksr, Hl'il Gihivsfi Chick- Hd L-armiiiiLUKh PA 
1S437. tf I i 72J! TZfrflWIl, emnil- gkih u ldwPf|E»LH 

DeulkLlttreh>'P{ rjsfm T c.iIitiilI j.t/day planner fur 

Wirukiws 95. l 7« \T -i.0. Fueli ihcjiiiLi failurep- a siii- 
btfc AmuricM-mwie dninsbec. ^end elkvk or money 
Lirdei 1 1 ir S23 luil-JuJizs S/H i lu. Dt j utrw:aLcni4at.L~u|iL l 
PO Lius 574. 1.2 Venue, CA 91750-0574 Tel: Mm 
3*34143. 

New Mega Chups. 2WW! The qwuatmK nuwr b'.H'k for 
drummers with WMt 2 mlllhm ocreiK?, dCYi^ncd to 
prnpei jour Univnrsirji beyend 'he nent nillleniuvn. 
OnJ\ S2U p<Mi-pjL{L Don'i wan 2 click ve-su ehnpc uuu 
ihusr. .Stfrul Lftck Nil MO ii ■ MCKlOfl, PD EiL.i 1ft55A, 
Suuk VlUajic. SL H.4t2-lb55. 

HCI Yislalite iJrmn Co, new ^c-lhppujtli teptotjfcif 
linn dnmvi Ipim the TTH. Ofl'cnw* fnlci^ nre: elrar. 
umber, hint pink, nmnkL-, emernld grewi. dark blue. 
vdlfA, und t&i. Snams 3,tlu m ft 5s 15, mm ftuK 
m lfl^2E>. Jnim sszcn IS-2ft". All pKss-? enn he 
ntndc m cunvciitmaul dapthh. Cnrnplcle with heavy- 
duly lu*nfwiO¥ nviulrijle 411^ n-jilfliiuj; ViMplilc 

conlvlerllmjnfri Rir mutne InformtCim, raH RCI Drum 
Ceil, 1 JIM i 4ft2- I it 3 SLamti ini, fT. 

JimihluiKl Drum und PCri.'ii>s.iun. Orsm^e Coamiy CA's 
lur^Cih slII*lEjliii ul uil-J Ji Jims uild. i.->lIIL i.lLi. 770 1 
Htt;i litsd . Lirwi. L'A 42H2 I Eel: rV j 4 )'h71 -IW# 

Yamaha Iteciinline 1 useliiii dnnuEd. Sew tiusUvi-'uJc. 
miL-viSLtvil.,Sl,5im Li?L■ iX2Xi 227-32P3 

firarnt.-pun—fte-envtr ytuu drumt tn minuie^ Special 
lLks.12, 11x15, I bilft, I ftx22 in ruinbew . Tie-dye, 
I m awl ica . Lcnlgn. ami preen v^ntn fru Fft4 99 po 
Box 1994, RaiheliLi CiiL-uiminpiL Ta 91729-1994, Teb 
19091 9K4Hj:4ft. 

Csnpulrr SiTin-n Baek^ruuifixt St:ike your drums a 
hockgr-uund. ..SiznJ pHuEL* and !>3.95 lat mul iere-cn. 
AdditiniHil Hirrren 1 - urr !SJ each liiclaiics S/H. Alw>* we 
du T-whirl transfers id phatau fnr SN.9S. PO Bn a 
1994, RjinelkPC'LWitiFiLiiipa. CA 9172^-1904, TcF (009) 
0L^-Ef24ft. 

Fln-apllrats Cymbal Kjirn. SptK^h^lOB ih new -md 
n^?d ZikJjinn. Sjhtaik Puisie. filers Huy. -clt, iradc. 
Alsf, Frepiisr dncnL-s, pifcitic.fifiiJid: slick h/heads. Fr« 
brochure. Kfiile 2 . ikut 340, ChirleOnfi. WV 2.^334 
Td |3041 7-H-4H5H. 




I>ruiii Ru^s. sLUJldaTJ Jiuj CUKU ii --i/Lfi ;i i -,is:;^L , '|i.- K-iX: 

brut hurt- CitH :H0J| ■. ■ r Omni 

DruiiiidifouH'i!! imljmmi 

Own a 11 i ■ ■ l L* 4 hF hfii|Kirv. Rm lk JriimHkks. '.'NA 

tli&kiirj. Nu* iLI|h: ■. |! ^|-^ -..ilL-il in iin^inni pud ■ 

4 £c. W«kJ und n\ lu-n-5jp sazch. 3 A ringer ronljoi, fcL 
1^, | LA. "tC. piy^. ruck VI ■ i?v>i-.1 l'Y 

VIS,A. AMI'X SI ! !il *i pair, indn.liih' di.fipiHV Mis! 

h :xn 1111 n^i AI Unevt ^ Mai ml- VO l-mti ! \. 

..hvAoi Rl n:^? Td 14 IH- 74 W ‘JoZ u T hi*: 

<-HI I 11 W 4 H 7 I 

Roller** Rogers—Crams. p-nns. sie-eesstme*. 
Mcninkv. S^i\ O MaliL. \V._- LliujuIlI I Ik - i:riE 11 >J irivui 
iL'I i Iruin I*!IkUt Mliscu.=t inv.riir.LiiK I.l^ii ill uni- 
Ikied'. dkuilblkb. ^iiml- pCiiiits. IhEi.i Ssiru,- KiiEkr<n. 
i'■ -ii i| i!l: 1 l liLiin 1 -- aJkl iliuilltiCls lie^ .jii 1 u-vLd Mi" K- 
ph nupli 1 Airily I -mI vini;i;> I i -:**if SI in get kind. 
Lii l L'-l. Ik, piUK und akk c^urno. Al LSr-jw' - Mumv 3> 
EVonl Si.. W<KwisDLkci. Kl UHMys. I d' i-Hil# 7w- 
uf fax: i4fll>7ftri'4R71 

Repairs. n-'Ulkvcrinfl, niw «h-riK f*nrl hmk|Hf. Nik! 

111 HPrAll ai ftjaSLWiiihliJ piiueh jjnd luuui ns! qiu a 
* ark in :■ iT-hip ■ nil cpiif&. - iiii I ■ ip. v* 1 i‘vitV llitl's 
Drum KepilFT & Shrll -SHun|i J * - I Nlnki::.. Kl.. 
HunisMIk' Al ^KhS.Td: IZHHHJ-CTWk 

MHP 1 DniiiK^ kolum ISiiiiL nriimkil.v, Y,irnin-s lu-- 
il.iji LkpiiLiik-% uviiil.ihk 1 . FiMtunni; |ilv-rnalrlhin-u. diMii 

kLSs. tOR-ma^ UuJLi.|iUv[llh| CuMvIj-desijLM r-;i I l---; 
i :mdy si jin i [ ii i ••.l>o I he uliimiU: in vuund jfid dtagr. 
lu si i mi i *.i 13 1 • n Cruulod T-s ;li: iiClivI Ii i i i 11 I;, 

MttP 1 cl: r51 Til S**-2tf2B t pheure or I w\ 

Vv ■■. mi'.rtirpdnuns L-nai 

4 LJ.lV C'ii-Jhhu Lk-rriissiHHi ,l| m:ipli I- k Mild '-Iilm-l'* 
PfeiwiiidijeA iur. I- -!K .nid v-nur-d gne.nl. Ikir.l". m- 
LM^s.jMfu.Khinii P(S Bp* Cfc HIuiiu WA 1HH2Z. 
Td: ■I 5 l"i l )h 6 t-|-^^ 3 | 7 . limwil; nsb'b|ui*|nd,com 

Study Materials 

VliniM FA ur> till ii^‘ Pcivlk*,i.. 41 mit&iyfc:unip.iu di i HT:i 
.iI lilruhi Spif^r.disl | TJdl Mat L.nart I i liKil-Vv II 
fl 0025 . Td: i^ 47 S f;is >H 47 . 

H-jv'Vi-vI 1 S, sL-SrLlinni Visai‘M:LslLT{,":iJd W-L'b siUv 

mumbcn. il ii I . c d m / it r m i p oc i n 1, C m n i I: 
Drm^pcdfll^ikil coin 


Drum- buisks h,i Iwl knihinun Kfnl * .:h.i.I-h i ■ 
ik Puihhcjiiiink 170 N.E. J3rd Strcvi. E ; s Lautfcrdilf. 

I HktiiLh H 14 4J. Il’I jyidl) Sfd. lfi-14. 

I'rc-d iyw IJrym QurU C_ - -u I ji Ici-^ & >inTnp1r! 

AIismIuEit I 1 lsi ever 7l4U KH-iiih R■ i l V *il// 

lu,i«r.. mll^L ^, K;i-il Ik lu itfo-. i E ihi Fi^hvns 
Vkkill l ... Cjlci: n Dav. Al I. Beiuk's. ^ppcELn, ATik^Ei 
- US-i. m Bux 247-MB. Mj.nud. MT Lfi L ?5+-rQ47. 
I'aJl.'liL'.. i4IJ)fi i. H AK I S vinik-iti 1 Jikljji.mi. 

rrc-!ili>i‘ Drummer Mupu/im 1 . l.iwe (ii pratlittf mil 
:ulK. Vl.j |Ltil i. j irI l.'IIijjlii.. [11 lU.'|IlI JijjlklI kssuISs 
I HI ill flhlln-. luvuls Hip' I rUf hri-L:h|i If fc :\±lh issLu L 
in i* .i • aiUhk'. ‘>A SMbwi-ipEimi. jus Inm i^ui'v. 
$27.SI5. Spiral hotind, 55-^\ Sot SOJ. 

.. 4l" A - VL^k I I 772. .Si 4 VI 4H-I 

u liltra virlconir! 

!£l I MilJlljl lIlU ’IIMSCT - 111 hiI^191 = IE1 1 III I k| 11IkIM'l ^ 1 L'Slu » I 

Ljs'^rn l' i ny:u.| iri ;i ^l.iirr | h.t ii id ill Lkllk- :n id njv‘-ls I k- >■«_- 
nstdiin£ Iikliitc^ in p3:LV ^Ko*Wr-n , i 1 1 1K :: imI Ii -111 
1 .1i.lii- Sl<> V'A plus SZ ^ shipping Fni ii fnvlinvlim>.- 
Hi: fiviiCisic 1 t^nij^Lh I I I lupii Si k.iiliL- HI 
W>7i4. Td: h-SAHi ^3-2022. I a. (*l)S) 12W 

Web slur L-pulq^ns-L'b.Lsrfti, L-ikiiLil: l 1 rtr:qnsfij Cn«n|uhi-j .onan. 

I liks^u K^k Uniui fharu-s L |i' 1 .ui r c v:lLL.i!uii lie ■ il.h 
rutk t-ki^io,. fr-Nii lIh- AO- LO iJiv “yik, I m frtr dmri 
und l j | a I ■ l. ^ 11 Lv. Jaliii- NLl-ILui-. f't> IlA 
[ .iikt^ ii k*. i \ " i-H 1 .1 ir rin;iiI rm ^ i im ^ :dnt li mi 

HJ lAipukir K-bdimmlJ ^-asrfLIu pj/efa^ plus nH|dn;il 
nfcutiL- S 15 m SLW ”nt3 T As u Tr.’inqiriliL. 

rpv.ca *miy 

Fiiivsi'r Di'jiviitiIii^ lyiiiu- [lie liu^esi ^Icctinfi vi' 
dtunuuifl^ Ik. iik-. :iml oik-os avjii;ih?e jnyvhIkL-re. 
1 ' u-ry vlylu i'Vei V V I. \l'ts .mpLul I lund;4>J- ■ I 
IuIlk jj^uklaMi- jL disuuM i prulc^. Vuil I he > J vcr 
LspaiiJiiij. r .Imria' L’j dinikUiLiiig.ui.il ik Wuh siU.-. ew 

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Instruction 

|.nn.ri|iin FikjrSimd: Kimly i^nsrfr- -s >r^i Jn..4 Kuril map, 

Tat: 11171 4M-0B73 

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For Sale 

Kit l- l h lmH4k (’ntsklag! L ud'-iv. SlingdLVlund. ^ikJ mhhl-! Mmiiuv V-jl 1 *. gunninine. 
VuiVMC ■ V ml LLCL- 1 h-M ni < 'em vv, 2 2-1 ,t Is cwy \h\\ s. I .i IhtIs \ IL-, IA > 35 * 7 -S 33 ,v 
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Viiinj£c Dnim Cemer—une rf the wurkl's liirgesL deaJer>. liRiniedii^e tash fur 

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Td I WKI ■ 733 Hl4>4 fOLhi U. fu-. (4S th i 1* 1-MoC. 

Miscellaneous 

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^ODFfl^D^-J^ME? JULV W 








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Are You 
On The Move? 


Modern Drummer 1 s On The Move department covers 
drummers whose activities and talent are worthy of 
recognition, but who are not yet figures on the 
national music scene. 

If you’d like to appear in this section, send us an 
audio or video cassette of your best work (preferably 
both solo and with a band) on three or tour songs, 
along with a brief bio sketch and a high-quality color 
or black & white close-up photo. (Polaroids are not 
acceptable.) The bio sketch should include your full 
name and age, along with your playing style(s), your 
influences, your current playing situation (band, 
recording project, freelance artist, ect.). Feel free to 
include any special items of interest pertaining to 
what you do and how you do it. We’d also like a list 
of the equipment you use regularly. 

Send your material to ON THE MOVE, Modern 
Drummer Publications, 12 Old Bridge Road, Cedar 
Grove, NJ 07009. Please note that no material can 
be returned, so please do not send original tapes or 
photos. 



M.QDERI9 DRUMMER JULY 1999 

















AUDIX 


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22* kick 

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and the jazz fusion group Wishful Thinking. David is also very 
tours regularly as a solo clini¬ 
cian. lie has authored several 
instructional videos and 
books and has been a colum¬ 
nist for Modern Drummer and 
various magazines worldwide. 

David states “1 have chosen Audix 
microphones because whether I’m 
playing live or in the studio, they make 
the difference!" 


B est known as an innova¬ 
tor of funk drumming, 
1 >avkl Garibaldi was first rec¬ 
ognized worldwide in 1970 
when he joined the legendary 
Tower of Power, it was in 
this setting that David 
became one of the most 
influential drummers of his 
general ion- 

Since 1977 he has worked with 

Patti Austin, Larry Carlton, 
Natalie Cole, Denies Williams, 
Mickey Hart's Planet Drum, 
Jermaine Jackson, Ray Obiedo, 
The Buddy Rich Orchestra, 
(lino Yarmelli, Talking Drums, 
Boz Staggs, The Yellowjacket^ 
active in music education, and 




Orefbey 


—David Garibaldi 











Happenings 


) 



New MD Advisory Board 
Member 


The editors of Modern Drummer are 


pleased to announce the addition of 
long-time Pat Metheny drummer (and 
frequent MD contributor) Paul Wertico 
to the Modern Drummer Advisory 
Board. 


MD Giveaway Winners 

The winners of the Sabian Sonically Matched Cymbal 
Performance Set Giveaway, which appeared in the December, 
January, and February issues of Modern Drummer, have been 
drawn from among the thousands of entries received. The first 
prize, a Hand Hammered Performance Set, went to Carson Lamm 
of Memphis, Tennessee, and Michael O'Neill of Bradford, 
Massachusetts. Second prize, an AA Performance Set, was won by 
Mark Stringham of Ivins, Utah, and Ronnie Byrd of Charleston, 
South Carolina. Third prize, an AA Rock Performance Set, went to 
Thomas Puleo of Brooklyn, New York and Ashley Hall of 
Calgary, Alberta, Canada. Fourth prize, an AAX Stage 
Performance Set, was won by Richard Postolka of Schenectady, 
New York and Brian Norris of Lexington, North Carolina. 

The balance of the prizes were awarded as follows: fifth prize: a 
Signature Terry Bozzio RADIA Low Melodic Crash Set —John 
McBride, Gresham, Oregon; sixth prize: a Signature Terry Bozzio 
RADIA High Melodic Crash Set —Michael D. Rudnick, Denver, 
Colorado; seventh prize: a Signature Terry Bozzio RADIA Low 
Stacked Crash/China Set —Tom Kondra, Rockaway, New Jersey; 
eighth prize: a Pro Performance Set —David Scott, Tacoma, 
Washington, and Sky Minor, Parker, Colorado; ninth prize: a B8 
Pro Performance Set— John Broz, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; tenth 
prize: a B8 Performance Set —Gina Weaver, West Seneca, New 
York; eleventh prize: a PRO Effects Bonus Pack— Steven Munari, 
St. Louis, Missouri; twelfth prize: a B8 Pro Effects Pack —Gerald 
Reynolds, Phoenix, Arizona; thirteenth prize: a B8 Effects Pack — 
Oscar Martinez, Alhambra, California. Congratulations to all the 
winners from Sabian and Modern Drummer. 


Maximum Ringo 

They certainly picked the right venue. This past February 16, a 
press conference was held at The All Star Cafe in Times Square to 
announce the beginning of Ringo Starr & His All-Starr Band's 
tenth anniversary and fifth US tour. There to answer questions 
were bandmembers Todd Rundgren, Jack Bruce, Simon Kirke, 
Timmy Cappello, Gary Brooker, and of course the ever-affable 
Mr. Starkey himself. To make the event even more special, Ringo 
was presented with a portrait by world-famous visual artist Peter 
Max, whose influence on art in the '60s paralleled The Beatles' 


profound musical legacy. A couple of days later, Ringo celebrated 
his return to New York with two wonderful shows at The 
Beacon Theater. 

People To Know 

The Percussive Arts Society has elected Robert Breithaupt, pro¬ 
fessor of music, department chair of jazz studies/music industry, 
and director of the noted percussion program at Capital University 
in Columbus, Ohio, as the 
Society's new president for 1999- 
2000 . 

Staci Stokes is the new educa¬ 
tion coordinator for Pro-Mark 
Corporation. Staci will be respon¬ 
sible for all of Pro-Mark's educa¬ 
tional activities, including work¬ 
ing closely with the company's 
roster of teacher/endorsers, edit¬ 
ing and producing the drumstick 
industry's first teacher-oriented 
newsletter, and developing new 
educational opportunities and pro¬ 
grams. Staci has an extensive background in music and percussion 
education, and holds current teaching credentials in the state of 
Texas. She also has experience as both a performer and an adjudi¬ 
cator in drum corps, and is an accomplished clinician. 

Music Dealers Expo 

The promoters of the Music Dealers Expo, to be held June 14-16, 
1999 at the Bally's Hotel & Casino convention center in Las 
Vegas, state that the new trade show will "create a new place for 
manufacturers and retailers to do business. The show will also 
bring together music distributors, wholesalers, and music educa¬ 
tors." 

The first two days of the Music Dealers Expo will only be 
opened to the trade. All retail store owners, managers, buyers, and 
key personnel are invited to attend. There are no registration fees 
or membership dues to attend the expo for retailers. Exhibiting 
companies will receive free passes to distribute to their customers. 
Retailers can also register by completing the registration informa¬ 
tion they'll receive in the mail or by simply calling the Music 
Dealers Expo. 

The last day of the Expo will be opened to all musicians inter¬ 
ested in checking out the latest products. This "Feedback Day" 
will allow exhibitors to conduct market research and to remind 
musicians to ask their local music shop to carry their products. 

Musicians wishing to attend the show will be charged a $25 
entrance fee. This fee helps to guarantee that the exhibitors see 
serious and dedicated musicians. 

The Expo will also host a special evening event that will benefit 
the Music For Hope Foundation, a non-profit organization that 



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provides opportunities for economically disadvantaged youth to 
become involved in music. Some of the corporate sponsors for 
Music For Hope include The Roland Corporation, Shure Brothers, 
and DW Drums. Retailers can leam more about how to start and 
support local chapters of Music For Hope at the Expo. 

The Music Dealers Expo has arranged for discount travel pack¬ 
ages for all show attendees. Although show delegates are encour¬ 
aged to stay at Bally's, since it is the show headquarters, attendees 
have a choice to stay at a number of hotels with rooms starting as 
low as $39 a night. For more information about exhibiting or 
attending the Music Dealers Expo, call (702) 451-4400 or 
(800) 659-9889. 

1998 Guitar Center 
Drum-Off Winner 

Guitar Center recently named the "top amateur drummer in the 
country" during their ninth annual Drum-Off grand finals competi¬ 
tion at the House Of Blues in Los Angeles. The winner, Marion 
Saunders from Los Angeles, was selected by a panel of judges 
that included (among others) drummers Nick Menza, Pat 
Torpey, Tommy Aldridge, Doane Perry, Denny Fongheiser, 
Vinnie Appice, and the 1997 and 1996 Drum-Off winners, Ivan 
Zervigon and Tony Johnson. 

Saunders took home over $10,000 in prizes, including a new 
Roland V-Drum kit and a Yamaha acoustic kit with Zildjian cym¬ 
bals (which he earned as a regional winner). He also received 
national recognition by performing live on air on the "Local 
Licks" show on LA radio station 95.5 KLOS. 

Immediately following the finals competition, the audience was 
treated to performances by Alex Acuna and Giovanni Hidalgo, 
as well as Matt Sorum and Randy Castillo (joined by special 
guests Slash and bassist Phil Sousson for a rousing rendition of 
Zeppelin's "Rock And Roll"). The show was closed by a smoking 
set by Vinnie Colaiuta, joined by friends David Garfield (keys), 
Neil Stubenhaus (bass), and Michael Landau (guitar). 

Lor information about the 1999 Guitar Center Drum-Off 
competition, call (818) 735-8800. 

Toca/Gibraltar Name Zuba 
"Best Band On The Net" 

Kaman Corporation, makers of Gibraltar hardware and Toca per¬ 
cussion, recently announced the winner of their "Best Band On 
The Net" contest. Boulder, Colorado-based Zuba was judged best 
band overall by three out of the five celebrity judges. 
Approximately $50,000 worth of prizes were donated to the top 
ten entrants by Remo, TKL, Vater, Paiste, Shure, Telex, 
D'Addario, Lexicon, Boston Acoustic, Vans, Ovation, Takamine, 
Toca, and Gibraltar. Media sponsors included Guitar World, 
Jazziz, and Modern Drummer magazines. 

Zuba is comprised of Liza Oxnard (vocals, guitar), Mike 
Cykosk (bass), and Wallace Lester (drums). The trio recently 
released South Of Eden, their fourth CD, which incorporates ele¬ 



"Best Band" winners Zuba—Liza Oxnard, Wallace Lester, (Paiste 
product specialist Paul Presson), and Mike Cykosk 


ments of folk, funk, hip-hop, and straight-ahead rock, all tied 
together with engaging, first-person lyrics. Lester cites Memphis 
drummers in general, and A1 Jackson Jr. in particular, as sources 
of musical inspiration. 

More than 200 bands from all over the world "auditioned" on a 
Web site Kaman had created specifically to search for "the 
world's best unsigned band." Site visitors cast more than 9,000 
ballots to select the top ten semi-finalists, all of whom received 
prizes for their efforts. Semi-finalist performances were then 
played for celebrity judges Rick Nielsen (Cheap Trick), Ken 
Block (Sister Hazel), Pete Escovedo (E Street), Ricky Lawson 
(Phil Collins), and Jonathan Moffet (Michael Jackson), to deter¬ 
mine the winner. 

Pete Escovedo and Jonathan Moffet both applaud the budding 
musicians they had judged. 



"I'm not too critical of any 
lack of technical excellence," 

Pete confides. "I listen more 
for the emotion behind it— 
and of course I listen to the 
rhythm section." 

"I focused on the flow of 
the music's structure, the 
melodic concentration, and 
the rhythmic 'punctuation 
marks,"' says Jonathan. "I 
was impressed by the bands' 
diversity, and by all the 
sounds and feels some of 
them had incorporated into 
their arrangements." 

Ricky Lawson explains that he had been looking for a way to 
get involved with up & coming talent after his stint with Eric 
Clapton. "When you're blessed, as I have been, you have to look 
for opportunities to turn around and be a blessing. I look at this 
kind of thing as planting a seed. And who knows," he laughs. 
"Maybe someday they'llbc hiring me!" 

All three of the drummer/judges praised Kaman's initiative. 
"You have to look to the next generation of musicians," says Pete. 


Contest judges Pete Escovedo and 
Jonathan MofFet. 


MODERN DRUMMER JULY 199? 






But doiyfjusf take ouf^BrcTforj||reHneck out 
Drummer had to say after reviewing them: 

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"Pearl's terrific new Power Shifter feature...change the pedal’s feel 
to suit their need instantaneously - like shifting gears in a car." 

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"the Uni-Pressure system is a very nice feature, indeed." 

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"This kind of activity gives young people a chance to show what 
they can do." 

The contest's runners-up in descending order are: K Rising 
(Virginia), Sweet Red Nixon (Connecticut), Bjome Lynne (UK), 
May Lian (Moscow, Russia), Sicboy (Connecticut), Flicker 
(Washington), Stinkpalm (Virginia), Amity (Indiana), and Uncle 
Stumpy's Pom Funk Band (Indiana). 


Pennsylvania 
Vintage Drum Show 

The Pennsylvania Vintage Drum Show, organized by the Lawton 
Dmm Company, is rapidly becoming one of the largest shows of its 
kind in the US. This annual event draws vintage drum collectors 
from Canada to Florida. In past years, special guests have included 
William F. Ludwig II, Harry Cangany (Drum Center of 
Indianapolis), and Russ Lease (Rockstock, Beatles memorabilia). 
The featured guest for 1998 was ten-year-old jazz wunderkind Aaron 
Kimmel, who offered performances that left everyone in awe. 

The show featured exhibits by over twenty-five vintage drum 
dealers and collectors, showing products by Rogers, Gretsch, 



Leedy, Slingerland, and other great names of drum history. 
Additionally, a variety of contemporary custom drum manufactur¬ 
ers had their wares on display. Plans for the 1999 show are already 
in progress. The tentative date and location is October 30, 1999, at 
Shikellamy High School, Sixth and Walnut Streets, Sunbury, 
Pennsylvania. For more information, contact the Lawton Drum 
Company at (570) 988-0655. 


Drums Along The Hudson 

Rob Wallis and Paul Siegel, founders of DCI Music Video and the 
Drummers Collective and Bass Collective music schools in New 
York City, have announced the formation of a new publishing, 
video, and record production company: Hudson Music, Inc. 


Following nearly twenty years of innovation and success in the 
instructional and documentary music video field, Wallis and 
Siegel's new company will produce books and audio CDs, as well 
as video cassettes, DVDs, and cybercast clinics and concerts. Their 
products will be distributed through Hal Leonard Publications. 

Web Site Updates 

Mike Balter Mallets 1 new site, www.mikebalter.com, features an 
on-line color catalog, a retail price list, and an extensive endorser 
listing with direct links to their email and/or Web sites. 

A new feature added to the D'Addario/Evans Web site, 
www.daddario.com, is Drum Talk. A message-posting page 
allows drummers to discuss gear, accessories, heads, sounds, or 
problems, or to trade playing advice. 

Alternate Mode modestly bills its Web site, www.alternate - 
mode.com, as "the ultimate Web site for the MIDI percussionist." 
With a wide variety of manufacturers' products under one roof, 
drummers can find "anything form the latest drum video, to elec¬ 
tronic trigger pads, drum machines, samplers, and KAT MIDI 
controllers." 

Individuals wishing to contact author/educator Peter Magadini 
should surf over to www.iscweb.com/personal/magadini. 

Pro-Mark has completely redesigned their Web site at 
www.promark-stix.com. In addition to a complete on-line catalog, 
playing and performing tips, and other topics of interest, the new 
site features simplified navigation, sound files, rollovers, and other 
"surprises too numerous to mention." 

Endorser News 

New Pro-Mark endorsers include: Serginho Melo (Brazilian ses¬ 
sion player), Lee Kelley (Gary Allan), Brian Moore (Usher), 
Evans Nicholson (Blue Dogs), Ward Durrett (marching special¬ 
ist), Trey Gray (Faith Hill), John Singer (Mark Wills), Nashville 
Street Beats (percussion ensemble), Tekashi ff Levin” Saito 
(LaCryma Christi), Marcus Baylor (Cassandra Wilson), Rick 
Weinland (Lloyd), Pablo Batista (Grover Washington Jr.), and 
Danny Byrd (Sinead Lohan). 

Now playing Slingerland drums are Peter Salisbury (The 
Verve), Sean Moore (Manic Street Preachers), Todd Roper 
(Cake), Mike Heaton (Embrace), and John Sullivan (Loudmouth). 

Trilok Gurtu is playing Remo drums and world percussion. 

Sabian has added electronic drumming specialist Tony 
Verderosa and Chicago Symphony percussionist Ted Akatz to its 
roster of artist/clinicians. 

Currently endorsing Pure Sound Percussion High Performance 
custom snare wires are Joe Porcaro, Stephen Perkins, Jeff 
Hamilton, John ”JR” Robinson, Gerald Heyward (Blackstreet), 
Jeff Stern (LA Studio), and Carl Allen. 

Tris Imboden (Chicago), Niko Quintal (Econoline Crush), Billy 
Ashbaugh (NSYNC), Jeff Clemens (G. Love & Special Sauce), 
Alan Pahanish (Powerman 5000), Matt Abts (Gov't Mule), Jerry 
Gaskill (Kings X), Mark Trojanowski (Sister Hazel), David 
Leach (Ben Harper & The Innocent Criminals), Steve Luongo 
(John Entwistle), Mike Levesque (independent), Bryan Head 


A'QCEftNDRL tfMZk JULY IW 




by Kt Humes 


EAST CHICAGO, INDIANA 46312 







(Black Lab), Adam Willard (Rocket From The Crypt), Todd 
Friend (H20), Eric Adams (independent), Alvino Bennett (Robin 
Trower), Jeff Kathan (Paul Rogers Band), and Ronnie Guitierrez 
(independent) are all playing Vater drumsticks. 

Premier drum artists include Sam Bryant (Kenny Wayne 
Shepherd), Scott Phillips (Creed), Walter Garces (Neil Citron), 
Steve Wolf (Lighthouse Family), Armand Majidi (Sick Of It All), 
Brendon Cohen (Vision Of Disorder), George Offenstopholus 
(Ferret Machine), John Kamoosi (Dayinthelife), and Steve Rucker 
(The Bee Gees, Gloria Estefan). 

Timothy Adams Jr. (timpanist, Pittsburgh Symphony) is using 
Mike Balter mallets. 

New Evans drumhead artists include Michael Spiro and Jesus 
Diaz (Talking Drums), Don Brewer (Grand Funk Railroad), Yuri 
Riley (MXPX), Hale Pulsifer (Angry Salad), Kevin Shepard 
(Tonic), Donald Edwards (Mark Whitfield), Tony Verderosa, 
Ron Gannaway (Steve Wariner), Tim Horsley (Suzy Boggus), 
Ivan Zervigon (independent), Suzanne Morissette, and Paul 
Simmons (session percussionist). 

Luis Conte, Mike Heidorn (Son Volt), Marko Djordjevic 
(independent), Jerry O’Neill (Voo Doo Glow Skulls), Neil Smith 
(Cyrus Chestnut), and Tom Williams (Matthew Ryan) are new 
Mapex artists. 

Endosers of Grover Pro Percussion Performance snare systems 
include Jay Bellerose (Paula Cole) and Roy Enyard (LA jazz). 
(Jay is using the snares on a djembe—the first such application.) 
Playing Grover Performance drumsets are Sean Estella (Edable 
Gray), Mark Hylander (Boston studio), and Mark Wanner (How 
Far North). Grover Performer snare drum endorsees include 
Tamora Gooding (All The Queen's Men) and Hale Pulsifer 
(Angry Salad). 

New Meinl percussion endorsers include Calixto Oviedo 
Mulens and Yulien Oviedo Sanchez (NG La Banda), Hakim 
Ludin (performer/educator), Manolo Badrena (Zawinul 
Syndicate), Amadito Valdes (Cuban session percussionist), and 
Nir Z (Genesis). 

Carolina Bigge (J. B. Kerner TV Show, WDR 5 Jazz Band), 
Stephan Emig (Hamid Baroudi, Stadt Theatre-Kassel), and Mark 
Panek (independent) are now Sonor drum artists. 

Brad Hargreaves (Third Eye Blind), Kevin Hayes (Robert 
Cray), Jim Bogios (Sheryl Crow), Wally Schnalle (jazz artist/com¬ 
poser), and Dawn Richardson (drummer/composer) are playing 
D'Amico drums. 

Alex Acuna has joined the Toca Percussion artist roster. 

Meinl cymbal endorsers now include Kieron Pepper (The 
Prodigy), Sean Shannon (Pat Travers), Tom Williams, Carl 
Albrecht, Mike Childers, and Spence Smith (all Nashville stu¬ 
dio/touring drummers), Mike Terrana (Gamma Ray, Axel Rudi 
Pell), Ron Bushy (Iron Butterfly), and John Dittrich 
(Restless Heart). 



Amores Grup De 
Percussion 

6/15 —Valencia, Spain. 
Contact Angel Garcia, 
email: amores@retemail.es 

Asian Drums Festival 

5/29-6/6 —More than 130 
performers from 10 or more 
countries. Singapore. 
Contact: Start Point 
International Pte Ltd, email: 
spintl @ singnet.com. sg 

Berklee College Of Music 
World Percussion Festival 

8/17-22 —Staff members 
include Mohamad Camara, 
Randy Crafton, Sa Davis, 
Kenwood Dennard, Ernesto 
Diaz, Dave DiCenso, Joe 
Galeota, Jamey Haddad, 
Skip Madden, Victor 
Mendoza, John Ramsay, 
Mikael Ringquis, Bobby 
Sanabria, Casey Scheuerell, 
Steve Wilkes, Giovanni 
Hidalgo, Horacio "El 
Negro" Hernandez, Karl 
Perazzo, Raul Rekow, 
Trichy Sankaran, Arthur 
Hull, Valarie Naranjo, and 
Orestes Vilato. Berklee 
College, Boston, MA, (617) 
266-1400 

Joe Bonadio 

7/11 — Eastern Illinois 
University, Charleston, IL, 
(217)581-3817 

Terry Bozzio 

5/19 — Lemmon 

Percussion, San Jose, CA, 

(408) 268-9150 

5/24 — West LA Music, 

Los Angeles, CA, 

(310)477-1945 

6/26 — Mars Music, 



Austin, TX, 

(512)451-9990 
10/3 — Stockholm 
Drumfestival, Stockholm, 
Sweden 

Central Michigan 
University Percussion 
Workshop 

7/11-24 —Central 
Michigan University, 
Mount Pleasant, MI, 
(517)774-1943 

Peter Erskine 

8/3 — Hillard Summer 
Festival, Trinity Hall, 
Cambridge England 

Dom Famularo 

5/18 — Musik Store, Koln, 
Germany, Contact: Hubi 
Lehmann, 06420561 
6/5 — Vermont Drummer 
Day, South Burlington, VT 
10/3 — Stockholm 
Drumfestival, Stockholm, 
Sweden 

Richie Garcia 

10/3 — Stockholm 
Drumfestival, Stockholm, 
Sweden 

Evelyn Glennie 

5/18 — Concerto with the 
Ensemble Orchestre de 
Paris, Paris, France 
5/26-27 — Recital, 
Braunschweig, Germany 
5/30 — Concerto with 
Radio Orchestra, 

Leipzig, Germany 
6/4-5—The 
Concertgebouw Concerto, 
with the Royal 
Concertgebouw Orchestra, 
Amsterdam, Netherlands 
6/10 —Castle Court 


hAOQC ftM DRUAWJlft JULY 1999 









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4940 Delhi Pike • Cincinnati, OH 45238 Write or email 
email: dixon@davitt-hanser.com us for a catalog 














School, Wimbourne, 

: 

t 

(210) 458-4011 

I 1 

Juilliard Summer 

Russ Moy Drum Studio 

Dorset, UK 

6/21 —Bands of America, 

Percussion Seminar 

Clinic/Concert 

6/12 — Leamington 

Schaumburg, IL, 

7/25-8/1 — "Designed 

6/13 — artists include Pat 

Hastings, UK 

(800) 848-2263 

specifically for high school 

O'Donnell, Todd Walker, 


6/25 — Duquesne University, 

students." Contact Janis 

Craig Scoppa, Stuart Karmatz 

Rick Gratton 

Pittsburgh, PA, (412) 396- 

Potter, seminar coordinator, 

with One Cool Guy, Donald 

6/21—Island Drum, 

6080 

(301)809-0955 

Boyle, Anthony Cartinella, 

Nanaimo, BC, 

7/11 — Eastern Illinois 


and a traditional African 

(205) 756-4699 

University, Charleston, IL, 

Manhattan School Of Music 

drumming ensemble featuring 

6/22 — Toews Music, 

(217)581-3817 

Summer Jazz Workshop 

A.J. Faas and David Freeman. 

Clearbrook, BC 


6/21-7/9 — Staff members 

Holiday Inn Select, Clark, NJ, 

6/23 — World of Music, 

KoSA 

include Justin DiCioccio and 

(908) 686-7736 

Kamloops, BC 

8/2-8 — Artists tentatively 

John Riley. Manhattan School 


6/24 — Wentworth Music, 

scheduled include John Beck, 

of Music, New York, NY, 

Percfest ’99 

Kelowna, BC 

Changuito, Jim Chapin, Dom 

(212) 749-2802, ext. 523 

7/2-4, featuring memorial to 


Famularo, Gordon Gottlieb, 


Giuseppe "Naco" 

Bob Harsen 

Horacio Hernandez, Marco 

NEXUS 

Bonaccorso, Laiqueglia, Italy. 

5/29 — Goleta Valley 

Leinhard, Bill Ludwig, Aldo 

6/5-6 — Robin Engelman, 

Contact Mario Riggio, 

Community College, 

Mazza, Jim Petercsak, 

Toronto, ON, Canada 

fax: 39 010 3727733, 

Santa Barbara, CA, 

Repercussion, Ed 

6/12 — Grand Valley Music 

email: mariggio @ tin. it 

(805)962-1211 

Shaughnessy, Gordon Stout, 

Festival. Grand Junction, 



and Glen Velez. Crane 

Colorado 

Mike Portnoy 

Steve Houghton 

School of Music, Potsdam, 

Contact: Betsy M. Green 

10/3 —Stockholm 

6/5 — University of Texas, 

NY, (800)541-8401 

(508) 358-2939, email: 

Drumfestival, Stockholm, 

San Antonio, TX, 


bmga@aol.com 

Sweden 



drummer's clothing guide 


this great pull* 
tures elastic tee 
wrltsfs, and 
extra warmti 
logo as mosj 
shirt, same 100* 
comfort—and c 
In one extra slz 
hlght end: M, l 


iver fea- 
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waist for 


name (pleas© print) 


make check 
payable & mall to: 
modern drummer 
publications 

attn. 

md classic casuals 
12 old bridge road 
cedar, grove, nj 07009 


phone 


visa i mastercard# 


name on card 

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S36.00-S70.00 


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All checks w money orders payable in US funds only [no cash]. No C.O.D. 
allow 4-6 weeks lor delivery * MO clothing can be shipped to sireet address only: no PO Box deliveries 


the modern 


if your merchandise 
subtotal is 


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qty 

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denim blue 

$33.00 




mossy green 

$36.00 




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MODERN DRUMMED JULY 1999 























































John Riley 

6/28-7/2 —Workshop, 
Youngstown State University, 
Youngstown, OH, 

(330) 742-3643 
7/26-31 —workshop, 
William Paterson University, 
Wayne, NJ, (973) 720-2320 

N. Scott Robinson 

6/18—Cleveland Museum of 
Art, Cleveland, OH, 
(216)421-7340 

Steve Smith with Vital 
Information 

5/30 — Bach Dancing and 
Dynamite Society, Half Moon 
Bay (SF Bay Area), CA 

Summer ’99 
Percussion Camp 

6/21-25 —Duquense 
University, Pittsburgh, PA, 
(800)934-0159 


Taipei International 
Percussion Convention 

6/5-12 — Featured artists 
include Ju Percussion Group, 
Glen Velez, Seoul Percussion 
Ensemble, Percussion Group 
Cincinnati, The Glass 
Orchestra, Amadinda 
Percussion Group, Les 
Percussions de Strasbourg, 
Taipai Percussion, 

Amsterdam Percussion 
Group, Percussion Art 
Quartet, Michael J. Burritt, 
and Percussion Ensemble 
Okada of Japan. Taipei, 
Taiwan. Contact: Ju 
Percussion Group 
Foundation, Pamela Liu, 2nd 
FL, 213, Nan-Kang Road, Sec 
3, Taipei, Taiwan, 886-2- 
2789-0599, ext. 413, fax: 
886-2-2789-0596, email: 
jugroup @ ms5 .hinet.net 


Thunderous Drums 

6/11-13 —Contact: Start 
Point International Pte Ltd, 
email: spintl@singnet.com.sg 

University Of North Texas 
Summer Drumset 
Workshop 

7/11-16 —Staff includes 
Bob Breithaupt, Guy 
Remonko, Ed Soph, and Ed 
Uribe. Contact Ed Soph, 
University of North Texas, 
Denton, TX, (940) 369-7536 

United States 
Percussion Camp 

7/11-17 — Professor Johnny 
Lee Lane, Jack McKenzie, 
Ndugu Chancier, Ruben 
Alvarez, Joe Bonadio, Gary 
Chaffee, Jim Dallas, Samuel 
Dinkins, Steve Houghton, 
Mike Mann, Lewis Nash, 
Don Parker, and more. 


Eastern IL University, 
Charleston, IL, 
(217)581-3925 

Glen Velez, Ethos, Talujon 
Percussion Quartet, and 
Justin DiCioccio 

5/18 — Merkin Concert Hall, 
New York, NY, 
(718)661-3334 


Glen Velez 



DRUM WORKSHOP 1999 CLINIC TOURS 


Stephen Peifcins 


Contact the one oj these participating DW dealers in your area for complete details .* 


Atlanta Pro Percussion 
(Atlanta, GA) 
Audio Light & Musical 
(Norfolk, VA) 
Buffalo Drum Outlet 
(Buffalo, NY) 
Cadence Music 
(Rochester, NY) 
Carl's Music 
(Lexington, KY) 
Centre Street Drums 
(Brockton, MA) 
Dale's Drum Shop 
( Harrisburg, PA) 


Drum World 

(Pittsburgh, PA) 
Dynamic Percussion 
(Manchester, CT) 
Explorers Percussion 
(Kansas City, MO) 
Fork's Drum Closet 
(Nashville, TN) 
Henri's Musk 
(Appleton, WJ) 
Huber & Breese Music 
(Eraser, Ml) 
Jersey Drums 
(Edison, NJ) 


Long Island Drum 
(Plainvicw, NY) 
Luchetti Music 
(Albuquerque, NM) 
Manny's Music 
(New York City, NY) 
Mom's Music 
(Louisville, KY) 
Music Center 
(Kenosha, Wl) 

The Music Mall 
(Nashua, NH) 

Music Shoppc/Pro Sound 
(Normal, IL) 


Rainbow Guitars 
(Tuscon, AZ) 
Reliable Music 
(Charlotte, NC) 
Rhythms Of Syracuse 
(Fayetteville, NY) 
Richmond Music 
(Richmond, VA) 
Rupps Drums 
(Denver, CO) 
Wagstaff Music 
(Salt Lake City, LIT) 

dw 


Drum Workshop, Inc. * 101 Bernoulli Circle * Oxnard, CA 9303 * www.dwdrums.com 


MO DE RN DRUM ME.R JU LY 1999 



























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Mnder 11 Dmmmer magazine 

JIM Intake th-l «'<h ‘,’ iiUtSkipiiy:n 


These and other titles are available at all liner music stores. 



Mil it S MX ltii '■>';‘(S i 11 1Jfew. hit* 

—Vinnfe Colaiola, Drumming Legfind 



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ADVERTISER 

INDEX 


1 ADVERTISER PAGENUMBER 

Gretsch 

Inside Back Cover 

Precision Dmm Co 

128 

AHEAD / Flix Tips/Big Bang Dist. 

63,155 

Grover Pro Percussion 


160 

Premier 

9,88 

Atlanta Pro Percussion 

139 

HQ Percussion Products 


112,142 

Pro*Mark 

16,91 

Audix 

161 

Humes & Berg 


167 

PureSound Percussion 

92 

Ayotte Drums 

62 

Interstate Musician Supply 


14 

Regal Tip 

30 

Berklee College Of Music 

131 

Investor 


128 

Remo 

4/5,7 

Bosphoms Cymbals 

42 

Island Drum 


125 

R.I.M.S. 

90 

Bucky Ball Music 

122 

J&J Custom Drums 


125 

Rhythm Tech 

106 

Cannon Percussion 

160,163 

Joe Morello 


128 

Sabian 

31,85 

C.K. Productions 

142 

JohnnyraBB Drumsticks 


43 

Sam Barnard Drum Covering 

127 

Clear-Sonic Mfg. 

127 

KAT (Alternate Mode) 


142 

Slug Percussion 

125 

Collarlock 

134 

King Kong Kases 


125 

Sonor 

55 

Concord Jazz Records 

62 

K&K Sound Systems 


143 

Sunlite 

37 

D'Amico 

125 

Kosa 


154 

Tama 

58/59,64/65,175 

Discipline Global Mobile 

139 

Latin Percussion 


48/49,135 

Taos Dmms 

128 

Dixon 

169 

Ludwig 

Inside Front Cover 

Taws Drum Works 

173 

The Drum Center of Lexington 

128 

Magstar Drums 


142 

Toca 

108/109,110/111 

Drum Doctors 

127 

Mainline 


101 

Tony Racciatti—Dmm Instmction 128 1 

Don's Music City 

128 

Mapex 


28/29,147 

Tosco Cymbals 

57 

The Drum Pad 

127 

May/DW 


17 

Tribes Dmms 

127 

Drums On Sale 

142 

MD Drummerware 


170 

Trueline Dmmsticks 

54,102 

Drumspan 

63 

MD Subscriptions 


94,154 

Turkish Cymbals 

95 

Drum Supply 

78 

Meinl Cymbals 


11 

Vater Percussion 

87,128 

Drum Tech 

104 

MRP Drums 


60 

VeriSonic Dmmsticks 

134 

DrumWorkshop 19,21,123,171 

Musician's Friend 


157 

Vintage Drum Center 

143 

Drum World 

157 

Musicians Institute 


61 

Waddell's Dmm Center 

142 

Drums In The Wind 

146 

Nashville Percussion Institute 

30 

Warner Bros. Pub./ Note Service Music 172 1 

Evans Products 

12/13,86 

Not So Modem Dmmmer 


143 

West LA Music 

90 

Fever Drums 

127 

Paiste 


1,93,103,107 

XL Specialty 

154 

Vic Firth, Inc. 

35,60,84 

Pearl Corporation 24/25,80/81,82/83,105,165 

Yamaha 

10,33,70/71 

Gibraltar 108/109,110/111,113 

Peavey 


115 

Zildjian 14,15,79,89,Outside Back Cover 

1 G K Music 

125 

Pintech Electronic Percussion 

125 


_ 


MODERN DRUMMER JULY >999 














ETC 455 


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The creative drummer uses snare drums much like an artist 
uses a palette of paints. Each snare drum and how It's tuned 
and played provides its own colors end textures-,so you can 
ultimately achieve exactly Ihe rigid sound for Ihe right situa¬ 
tion. Mere and more drummers are availing themselves of e 
variety of snare drums, to satisfy their need to achieve that 


right sound. In response, Tama has created a constantly 
expanding collection of serious snare drums. 

And now Toma presents the first artist signature snare drums 
in out history, the Signature Palette Series... six superbly craft¬ 
ed instruments designed with drummers selected for their 
understanding,skill and influence on the art of the snare drum. 


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Fflf a full color catalogue on T^pna Drums and hfejtTwar^, sand S3-D0 to; TAMA depi, MPQEH. BO, Box &B6. 
Btfh&aJem, PA I'&(520 1 ur P.O- By* Idaho Falls, ID 83403. Visli CkIi wai^site at www.trima gupn 


§TMWA 










S teve Hubback of The 

Netherlands describes himself 
as a percussionist/ composer/ 
blacksmith/bronzesmith/sculptor. 
As such, he takes the term "percus¬ 
sive arts" very seriously. Steve has 
created unique percussion instru¬ 
ment/sculptures for some of 
Europe’s leading symphonic and 
avant-garde percussionists. His 
work has also appeared in major art 
exhibitions. 

As a percussionist himself, Steve 
has a dozen recordings and hun¬ 
dreds of performances to his credit. 
His personal "drumkit," which he 
plays with his group Metal Moves, 
is shown in the close-up photo. 
According to Steve, "It sounds 
amazing, and it all packs up to fit in 
a suitcase." 



PHOTO REQUIREMENTS 

1. Photos must be high-quality and in color. 35mm slides are preferred; color prints will be considered; Polaroids not accepted. 2. You may send more than one view of the kit. 3. Only show drums, no 
people. 4. Shoot drums against a neutral background. Avoid "busy" backgrounds. 5. Clearly highlight special attributes of your kit. Send photo(s) to: Drumkit Of The Month, Modern Drummer, 12 Old 
Bridge Road, Cedar Grove, NJ 07009-1288. Photos cannot be returned. 


MODERN DRUMMER JULY I 999 










re Gretsch drums 


Gretsch * P.0. Box 2468 * Savannah, GA 31402 * (912) 748-7070 * www.gret 5 ch.com 


ptwLt^Mplfry by fcinkin